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MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET. TWO LOVERS 


Size of the original engraving, 614 x 41 inches 
In the Ducal Collection, Coburg 


ENGRAVERS. 


AND 


HTOCGHERS 


SIX LECTURES DELIVERED ON THE SCAMMON FOUNDATION 
AT THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO, MARCH 1916 


BY 


FITZROY CARRINGTON, M. A. 


CURATOR OF PRINTS AT THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, 

BOSTON; LECTURER ON THE HISTORY AND PRINCIPLES 

OF ENGRAVING AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY; EDITOR OF 
“THE PRINT-COLLECTOR’S QUARTERLY 


WITH 133 ILLUSTRATIONS 


THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO 
1917 


DESIGNED AND PUBLISHED 


"THOMSEN - - BRYAN - -ELLIS ‘COMPANY 


rs ape 


% WASHINGTON _ BALTIMORE 
NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA 


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NOTE 

The lectures presented in this volume comprise 
the twelfth series delivered at the Art Insti- 
tute of Chicago on the Scammon Foundation. 
The Scammon Lectureship is established on 
an ample basis by bequest of Mrs. Maria 
Sheldon Scammon, who died in rgor. The 
will prescribes that these lectures shall be upon 
the history, theory, and practice of the Fine 
Arts (meaning thereby the graphic and plastic 
arts), by persons of distinction or authority 
on the subject on which they lecture, such 
lectures to be primarily for the benefit of the 
students of the Art Institute, and secondarily 
for members and other persons. The lectures 
are known as “The Scammon Lectures.” 


CONTENTS 


LEGEORE: | 


GERMAN ENGRAVING: From THE BEGINNINGS 


PAGE 


TO AVEAR DING SOHONGAUER § 6) (sone a, 
LECTURE EH. 
Iratian Encravine: THE FLorenTINEs . 51 


LECTURE Tif 


GERMAN EncRAvING: THe MASTER OF THE 
AMSTERDAM CABINET AND ALBRECHT 


DURER . : ; ; ee ee sete 
LECTURE IV 
IraLttan Encravinc: MAnTrecna To Marc. 
ANTONIO RaIMONDI : f : : sp iE BO 
BECTORE Je: 
Some MASTERS OF PoRTRAITURE . : RET 
LECTURE VI 


LanpscaPE ErcHinc Fe de see aay Me Ae a ae 


LIST. OF ILLUSTRATIONS 


PAGE 
_ MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET. Two Lovers 
Frontispiece 
MASTER OF THE PLAYING Carps. St. Gooner yn & 15 
IVERO te OOELOWS) 5.70. ee an Pea es Seen dee 16 


MAstTER OF THE YEAR 1446. Christ Nailed to the Cross 19 


Master oF St. Joun THE Baptist. St. John the 
BORE Sc eke eet Wake ae Sa Re net me Ree 


Master E. S. or 1466. Madonna and Child with Saints 


Marpuerite and Catherme oo. op ea eg 
Bcstasyior ot. Mary Magdalen: 4. i xte ad tino 

PD eSen toparmaten tye ioe Ne Ere A eke eae eae 
St.John on’ the tsland-of Pattngs si rite Oo Cea es 
Martin ScuHoncaver. Virgin witha Parrot . . . 31 
Lemptation ors. Anthonys: oe a tL Res 

PS pei Oe NO NV ARON or goth ns Sen tt em te 
PrlatesWashine Piisdl@nds. rp au. eye eh 

St. John on) theIclandiofPatmes... 66. 2g ae bee 
Christ Appearing to the Magdalen’. 9.) > 38 
Virgin seated ina Courtyard 0+ gr Se ert oe 
Ansel ok the Annunciation’ 400 o oe) ep ese 
lik ak Tle lato eam ee ee a Dears ct pee A 
SAGE me hab, hd pt Ae aimee iegte epee yan 
Maser ti Gz. Shitist Rempted i 2 vat oe tO Se) ies 


Christ-Eatermne erusajem™ i643, btn ae ga 


EIST OF ELLUSTRA TIONS 


Anonymous FiorentinE, XV Century. Profile Por- 

trait of a Lady 

Wild Animals Hunting and Figheng 

Triumphal Procession of Bacchus and Ariadne 

Jupiter 

Mercury ; 

Lady with a meas : 

The Christian’s Ascent to ais cay af Paradise. 
From “Il Monte Sancto di Dio,” Florence, 1477 

Dante and Virgil with the Vision of Beatrice. 
From the “Divina Commedia,” Florence, 1481 

Assumption of the Virgin (After Botticell1) . 

Triumph of Love. From the Triumphs of Petrarch 

Triumph of Chastity. From the Triumphs of 
Petrarch . 

Libyan Sibyl 


Anonymous NorrH Irarian, XV Century. The 
Gentleman. From the Tarocchi Prints (E Series) 
Clio. From the Tarocchi Prints (S Series) . 
The Sun. From the Tarocchi Prints (E Series) 
Angel of the Eighth Sphere. From the Tarocchi 
Prints (E Series) 


Cristorano Roserra. Adoration of the Magi . 
Antonio PoLtiaivoLo. Battle of Naked Men 


MAstTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CaBINET. Ecstasy of St. 
Mary Magdalen . 
Crucifixion . 
Stag Hunt 
St. George 


PAGE 


101 


EIST OF ILEUS. RA FIONS 


ArsrecuT Durer. Virgin and Child with the Monkey 
Four Naked Women 
Hercules 


Anonymous Nort Irarian, XV Century. Death of 
Orpheus 


ALBrecHT Durer. Death of Orpheus 
Battle of the Sea~Gods (After Mantegna) 
Adam and Eve 
Apollo and Diana . 
St. Jerome by the Willow Thee ee Sai 
Holy Family 
Knight, Death and the eal 
Melancholia : 
St. Jerome in His Cell 
Virgin Seated Beside a Wall . 
Christ in the Garden 
Erasmus of Rotterdam 


ANDREA Manrecna. Virgin and Child . 
Battle of the Sea-Gods 
The Risen Christ Between oo Maas ae 
Longinus . 


ScHOOL OF ANDREA Mantecna. Adoration of the Magi 
Zoan AnpREA (?). Four Women Dancing 


Giovanni Antonio DA Brescia. Holy Family with 
Saints Elizabeth and John . 


ScHOOL OF Leonarpo pa Vinci. Profile Bust of a Young 
Woman 


NicoLetro Rosex pa MopEna. Orpheus 


PAGE 
107 
108 
III 


ae 


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 


PAGE 
Jacopo pe’ Barsart. Apolloand Diana . . . . 19 
DEC ACREMMB Un a SA eee ae eee Toe 
GiuLtio Campacnota. Christ and the Woman of 
Samaria .. BE Ae Rab oy awe aR a SE 
Ganymede (First State) La aLR ser paie ATONE hanes Boat = fu i) 
POM Ee BAITS cara smi wT had oh Noi 
Giutio anD Domenico Campacnota. Shepherds in a 
Aoaiigsceite) Phe on oe se Te cee erty he RS OR 
Marcantonio Rarmonp1. St. George and the Dragon 171 
PURE B aah at mehina mime ea men he ae 74 uy Em 
RUB COLE lobar Mater aE Sark ame aad Seka Cag ae 
Death of:Lucretia. ais at" Ae 
Philotheo Achillini (“The Guia Player’) one eer 
Petro Arete NL ise See pia ae NS 
Master Wg. Head of a Young Woman Bor strate 183 
AvBrecut Durer. Albert of Brandenburg. . . . 184 
einikp: MelanchthGnn: foie aoe TS TR 
Antuony Van Dyck. Portrait of Himself (First State) 188 
ipanS Smycers. (Wirst States. io) Ce A IgI 
Lucas Vorsterman (First State) . 2 est oe te SRG 
Rempranpt. Jan CornelisSylvius . . . . . . 195 
Rembrandt Leaning ona Stone Sill. . . . . 196 
Clement dei Jonghe (Hirst State) (00 358) PO te 
tan’ Duttca(itegotatey, cj On al gees: 198 
Craupe Meuuan. Virginiada Vezzo . . . |. 201 
Pie wee Msn, Weve Eh ny Tye ae ha, eee 


Jean Morin. Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio . . . 205 


LIS: OF ELLUS TRATIONS 


Rogpert NanteuiL. Pompone de Belliévre . 
Basile Fouquet 
Jean-Loret™. 


J. A. McN. WuistLer. Annie Haden 
Riault, the Engraver . 


Anvers Zorn. Ernest Renan 
The Toast 
Madame Simon 
Miss Emma Rassmussen . 


ALBRECHT Dtrer. The Cannon . 


AucustTIn HtrscHvoGEL. Landscape 


Remsranpt. The Windmill 

Three Trees 

Six’s Bridge REPLIED) Mi Shs oe cher a RR a Ea tg 

Landscape with a Ruined Tower and Clear Fore- 
PINE eta cea he MERON ela plete eta tien aR ae 

Landscape with a Haybarn and a Flock of Sheep 

Three Cottages 

Goldweigher’s Field 


Jacop RuyspaEt. Wheat Field 
CLaubE Lorrain. Le Bouvier 


CHARLES Jacque. Troupeau de Porcs 
Storm—Landscape with a White Horse 


CHARLES-FRANCOIS Dausicny. Deer in a Wood 
Deer Coming Down to Drink 
Moonlight on the Banks of the Oise 


CamILLE Corot. Souvenir of Italy 


PAGE 
206 
211 
212 


215 
216 


219 
220 


250 
253 
eo 
Bex 
258 


261 


LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 


PAGE 

JeAN-Francors Miter. The Gleanérs 20 6. 4262 
SEYMOUR Hapen. Cardigan Bridge. . . . .  .) 265 
Dyekoad tialepperanyey. oti atr Slate SOG 
SuNseen nelande Mic ok hee eg hia kpetee OO 
SWEN: MDS y cis by wre cols et eset hoe html is «SB 

J. A. McN. WuistLer. Zaandam (First State) . . 271 


REMBRANDT. View of Amsterdam from the East . . 272 


TO THE READER 


WHEN that most sensitive of American print- 
lovers, the late Francis Bullard, learned that I was 
to deliver at Harvard, each year, a course of lec- 
tures on the History and Principles of Engraving, 
he wrote me one of those characteristic letters 
which endeared him to his friends, concluding his 
wise counsels with these words: “Nothing original 
—get it all out of the books.” 

In these six lectures I have endeavored to profit 
by his suggestion. In them there is little original: 
most of it zs out of the books. Books, however, like 
Nature, are a storehouse from which we draw what- 
ever is best suited to our immediate needs; and if 
in choosing that which might interest an audience, 
to the majority of whom engravings and etchings 
were an unexplored country, I have preferred the 
obvious to the profound, I trust that the true-blue 
Print Expert will forgive me. These simple lectures 
make no pretense of being a History of Engraving, 
or a manual of How to Appreciate Prints. My sole 
aim has been to share with my audience the stimu- 
lation and pleasure which certain prints by the 
great engravers and etchers have given me. If I 
have succeeded, even alittle, I shall be happy. 
I would add that the lectures are printed in sub- 
stantially the same form as they were delivered. 


Consequently they must be read in connection with 
the illustrations which accompany them. 

The Bibliographies which follow each chapter 
have been prepared by Mr. Adam E. M. Paff, 
Assistant in the Department of Prints at the 
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. 


FirzRoy CarRINGTON 


Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 
Fune 26, 1916 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


GERMAN ENGRAVING: FROM THE BEGIN- 
NINGS TO MARTIN SCHONGAUER 


HERE were the beginnings? When were the 

beginnings? Germany, the Netherlands, 
and Italy have each claimed priority. Max Lehrs 
has settled these rival claims, so far as they can be 
settled at the present time, by locating the cradle 
of engraving neither in Germany, in the Nether- 
lands, nor in Italy, but in a neutral country— 
Switzerland, in the vicinity of Basle—naming the 
Masrer OF THE Piayino Carns as probably the 
earliest engraver whose works have come down to 
us. Undoubtedly this artist was not the first to 
engrave upon metal plates, but of his predecessors 
nothing is known, nor has any example of their 
work survived. 

The technical method of the Master of the Play- 
ing Cards is that of a painter rather than of a gold- 
smith. There is practically no cross-hatching, and 
the effect is produced by a series of delicate lines, 
mostly vertical, laid close together. His plates are 
unsigned and undated, so that we can only approx- 
imate the period of his activity. That he preceded, 
by at least ten years, the earliest dated engraving, 


[13] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


the F/agellation, by the Master of 1446, may safely 
be assumed, since in the manuscript copy of Conrad 
von Wurzburg’s “The Trojan War,” transcribed in 
1441 by Heinrich von Steinfurt (an ecclesiastic of 
Osnabrtick), there are pen drawings of figures wear- 
ing costumes which correspond exactly with those 
in prints by the Master of the Playing Cards in his 
middle period. The Master of the Playing Cards is, 
therefore, the first bright morning star of engrav- 
ing. From him there flows a stream of influence 
affecting substantially all of the German masters 
until the time of Martin Schongauer, some of whose 
earlier plates show unmistakable traces of an ac- 
quaintanceship with his work. 

St. George and the Dragon is in his early manner. 
Here are plainly to be seen the characteristics of 
this first period—the broken, stratified rocks, the 
isolated and conventionalized plants, and the pe- 
culiar drawing of the horse, especially its slanting 
and half-human eyes. The Playing Cards, from 
which he takes his name, may safely be assigned to 
his middle period. The suits are made up of Flowers 
(roses and cyclamen), Wild Men, Birds, and Deer, 
_with a fifth, or alternative suit of Lions and Bears. 
Like all the early German designers of playing 
cards, he has given free rein to his fancy and inven- 
tiveness. The position of the different emblems 1s 
varied for each numeral card; and each flower, wild 


[14] 


MASTER OF THE PLAYING CARDS. ST. GEORGE 


Size of the original engraving, 574 x 514 inches 
In the Royal Print Room, Dresden 


MASTER OF THE PLAYING CARDS. MAN OF SORROWS 


Size of the original engraving, 734 x $4 inches 
In the British Museum 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


man, bird, or beast, has an attitude and character 
of its own, no two being identical. No engraver 
has surpassed him in truthfulness and subtlety of 
observation and in the delineation of birds few 
artists have equalled him. His rendering of the 
growth and form of flowers would have delighted 
John Ruskin. In the King of Cyclamen and the 
Queen of Cyclamen the faces have an almost por- 
trait-like individuality. The hands are well drawn 
and do not yet display that attenuation which is 
characteristic of nearly all fifteenth century Ger- 
man masters and is a noticeable feature in engrav- 
ings by Martin Schongauer himself. The clothing 
falls in natural folds, and in the King of Cyclamen 
the representation of fur could hardly be bettered. 

To his latest and most mature’ period must be 
assigned the Man of Sorrows—in some ways his 
finest, and certainly his most moving, plate. Not 
only has he differentiated between the textures of 
the linen loin-cloth and the coarser material of the 
cloak; but the column, the cross with its beautiful 
and truthful indication of the grain of the wood, 
and the ground itself, all are treated with a knowl- 
edge and a sensitiveness that is surprising. The 
engraver’s greatest triumph, however, is in the 
figure of Christ. There is a feeling for form and 
structure, sadly lacking in the work of his suc- 
cessors, and his suggestion of the strained and 


[17] 


ENGRAVERS AND. ETCHERS 


pulsing veins, which throb through the Redeemer’s 
tortured limbs, 1s of a compelling truth. 

Chief among the engravers who show most clearly 
the influence of the Master of the Playing Cards is 
the MAsTER OF THE YEAR 1446, so named from the 
date which appears in the flagellation. His prints 
present a more or less primitive appearance, and 
were it not for this date, one might be tempted, on 
internal evidence, to assign them to an earlier 
period. In the Passion series, in particular, many 
of the figures are more gnome-like than human. 
Such creatures as the man blowing a horn, in Christ 
Nailed to the Cross, and the man pulling upon a 
rope, in the same print, recall to our minds, by an 
association of ideas, the old German fairy tales. 

Contemporary with the Master of 1446, and be- 
longing to. the Burgundian-Netherlands group, to 
which also belong the two anonymous engravers 
known as the Master or THE Mount OF CALVARY 
and the Master oF THE DEATH or Mary, is the 
Master OF THE GARDENS OF Love. His figures are 
crude in drawing and stiff in their movements. His 
knowledge of tree forms is rudimentary; but his 
animals and birds show real observation and seem 
to have been studied from life. 

In the larger of the two engravings from which 
he takes his name, we see reflected the pleasure- 


loving court of the Dukes of Burgundy. On 
[18] 


MASTER OF THE YEAR 1446. CHRIST NAILED TO THE CROSS 


Size of the original engraving, 414 x 314 inches 
In the Royal Print Room, Berlin 


MASTER OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST. ST. JOHN THE 
BAPTIST 


Size of the original engraving, 84 x 57 inches 
In the Albertina, Vienna 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


the right, a lady leads her lover to a table spread 
with tempting viands. She stretches forth her right 
hand to take the fruit. It is a fig, the sign of fer- 
tility. To their right, drinking from a stream, is a 
unicorn, the sign of chastity. The artist seemingly 
wishes the lady’s message to read that she is still 
unwedded, and that, were she wedded, she would 
be a good mother. Observe, likewise, the way in 
which the engraver has placed the wild hogs, deer, 
and bears emerging from the woods, while, in the 
sky, numerous birds wing their flight. In the im- 
mediate foreground a lady and a cavalier are read- 
ing poetry to each other. Another lady plays to a 
gallant who, in a most uncomfortable attitude, 
holds a sheet of music. In the right-hand corner is 
a fourth pair, the lady busily twining a wreath for 
her lover’s hat, which lies on her lap. We have here 
a compendium of the courtly life of the time, which 
is about 1448. 

Tue Master or Sr. Joun THE Baptist may fit- 
tingly be called the first realist in engraving. His 
plates do not display that extraordinary delicacy 
in cutting which is characteristic of the Master of 
the Playing Cards. Like that earlier engraver, he 
makes little use of cross-hatching, and his strokes 
are freely disposed—more in the manner of a painter 
than a goldsmith-engraver. His birds and flowers 
are closely observed and admirably rendered. 


[21] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


The mullein, the columbine, and the iris in Sv. 
Fohn the Baptist are each given their individual 
character; the tree trunks to the right no longer 
resemble twisted columns, as in earlier work, but 
have real bark with knot holes and branches organi- 
cally joined, though the foliage is still convention- 
ally treated. One cannot but remark, also, the 
skilful way in which the engraver has differentiated 
between the furry undergarment and the cloak 
which St. John the Baptist wears. 

In St. Christopher we have probably one of his 
latest works. His representation of the waves, of 
the sky and clouds, is noteworthy, while, on the 
beach, the sea-shells give mute testimony to his 
love for little things. 

Of the predecessors of Martin Schongauer, none 
exerted a greater influence than the Masrer E. S. 
or 1466. On the technical side he was the actual 
creator of engraving as practised in modern times, 
and was a determining factor in the progress of 
the art. Even the Italian engravers were unable to 
withstand it; their Prophets and Sibyls are partly 
derived from his Evangelists and Apostles, the easy 
disposition of his draperies furnishing them with 
models. Over three hundred engravings by the 
Master E. S. have come down to us, and over a 
hundred more can be traced through copies by 
other hands, or as having formed component parts 


[22] 


MASTER E. S. OF 1466. MADONNA AND CHILD WITH SAINTS 
MARGUERITE AND CATHERINE 
Size of the original engraving, 854 x 634 inches 
In the Royal Print Room, Dresden 


MASTER E. S. OF 1466. ECSTASY OF ST. MARY 
MAGDALEN 


Size of the original engraving, 614 x 5 inches 
In the Royal Print Room, Dresden 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


of his two sets of playing cards—the smaller set 
made up of Wild Animals, Helmets, Escutcheons, 
and Flowers, while the larger set comprises Men, 
Dogs, Birds, and Escutcheons. 

His work shows unmistakably the influence of 
the Master of the Playing Cards, and we may 
safely place him in the region of the upper Rhine, 
probably in the vicinity of Freiburg or Breisach. 
In the Madonna and Child with Saints Marguerite 
and Catherine his peculiar qualities and limitations 
may clearly be seen. The plants and flowers, with 
which the ground is thickly carpeted, are engraved 
in firm, clear-cut lines, betokening the trained hand 
of the goldsmith. The figures and drapery are ren- 
dered with delicate single strokes; but in the shaded 
portions of the wall, back of the Madonna, cross- 
hatching is skilfully employed. As is the case in 
nearly all the works of the early German engravers, 
the laws of perspective are imperfectly understood, 
but none the less the composition has a charm all 
its own. 3 

The Ecstasy of St. Mary Magdalen is of interest, 
not only technically and artistically, but because of 
its influence upon the Master of the Amsterdam 
Cabinet, who has twice treated the subject, and 
upon Albrecht Diirer, by whom we have a wood- 
cut seemingly copied from this engraving. Martin 
Schongauer, likewise, may have profited by the 


[25] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


feathered forms of the angels which reappear, some- 
what modified, in his engraving of the Nafivity. 
The birds and the isolated plants in the foreground 
still show the influence of the Master of the Playing 
Cards. 

St. Matthew (whom we shall meet again in our 
consideration of Florentine engraving, transformed 
into the Tidurtine Sibyl, engraved in the Fine Man- 
ner of the Finiguerra School) and St. Paul (who 
likewise reappears as 4mos in the series of Prophets 
and Sibyls) show an increasing command of tech- 
nical resources. The draperies are beautifully dis- 
posed; and, in St. Pau/, the system of cross-hatch- 
ing upon the back of the chair, in the shaded por- 
tions beneath, and upon the mantle of the saint, is 
fully developed. 

The Madonna of Einsiedeln, dated 1466, is 
usually accounted the engraver’s masterpiece. 
Beautiful though it 1s in composition and in execu- 
tion, it suggests a translation, into black and white, 
of a painting, and on technical grounds, as well as 
for the beauty of its component parts, one may 
prefer the Design for a Paten, dating from the same 
year [1466]. Here the central scene, representing 
St. John the Baptist, owes not a little, both in com- 
position and in technique, to the Master of St. John 
the Baptist. The four Evangelists, arranged in 
alternation with their appropriate symbols, around 


[26] 


TEN 


inches in diameter 


MASTER E. S. OF 1466. DESIGN FOR A PA 


% 


In the Royal Print Room, 


Size of the original engraving, 7 


Berlin 


MASTER E. S. OF 1466. ST. JOHN ON THE ISLAND OF PATMOS 


Size of the original engraving, 814 x 534 inches 
In the Hofbibliotek, Vienna 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


the central picture, are little masterpieces of char- 
acterization and of engraving, and there can be 
nothing but unmixed admiration for the way in 
which plant and bird forms are woven into a per- 
fectly harmonious pattern. 

St. Fohn on the Island of Patmos \ikewise shows 
unmistakably the influence of the Master of St. 
John the Baptist and is doubly interesting inas- 
much as, in its turn, it had a shaping influence 
upon the engraving of the same subject by Martin 
Schongauer. It is dated 1467, the latest date found 
upon any plate by the Master E. S.; and it is as- 
sumed that in this year his activity came to an end. 

Martin SCHONGAUER, who was born in Colmar 
about 1445 and is known to have died in 1491, is 
not only the most eminent painter and engraver 
in the latter third of the fifteenth century, he is 
one of the very greatest masters of the graphic arts. 
His plates number one hundred and fifteen, and, 
as in the case of Albrecht Diirer, it is upon his en- 
graved work, rather than upon his all too few 
paintings, that his immortality must rest. 

Schongauer’s prints can be arranged in something 
approximating chronological order. In the earliest 
twelve engravings the shanks of the letter M, in 
his monogram, are drawn vertically, whereas in all 
his later prints they slant outward. This apparently 
minor point is really of great significance in a study 


[29] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


of his development, since it enables us to place 
correctly certain plates which, until recently, were 
assigned to his latest period, such as the Death of 
the Virgin, the Adoration of the Magi, and the 
Flight Into Egypt. 

One of the richest toned plates in this first group 
is the Virgin with a Parrot, an engraving which, 
incidentally, exists in two states. In the second 
state, the cushion upon which the Christ Child is 
seated, instead of being plain, has an elaborate 
pattern upon the upper side, and the flowing tresses 
of the Virgin are extended more to the left, thereby 
greatly improving the composition as a whole. 

For Martin Schongauer, as for nearly all the 
earlier German masters, the grotesque had a 
strange fascination. His power of welding together 
parts of various animals into living fantastic 
creatures is nowhere better seen than in the 
Temptation of St. Anthony. Vasari tells how the 
young Michelangelo, meeting with an impression 
of this engraving in Florence, was impelled to copy 
it with a pen “‘in such a manner as had never before 
been seen. He painted it in colors also, and the 
better to imitate the strange forms among these 
devils, he bought fish which had scales somewhat 
resembling those of the demon. In this pen copy 
also he displayed so much ability that his credit 
and reputation were greatly enhanced thereby.” 


[30] 


“ 


VIRGIN WITH A PARROT 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. 


inches 


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In the Public 


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MARTIN SCHONGAUER. TEMPTATION OF ST. ANTHONY 


Size of the original engraving, 1234 x 9% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. DEATH OF THE VIRGIN 


Size of the original engraving, 1014 x 654 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. PILATE WASHING HIS HANDS 


Size of the original engraving, 634 x 434 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


It would appear to be one of Schongauer’s early 
plates, not only from the form of the monogram, 
but also from the treatment of the upper portion of 
thesky, shaded with many horizontal graver strokes, 
growing stronger as the upper edge of the plate is 
reached—a treatment which does not occur in oy 
other print by him. 

Among the myriad renderings of the Death of 
the Virgin, by painters and engravers, it is doubtful 
if any version is superior, so far as dramatic inten- 
sity is concerned, to Schongauer’s. As a composi- 
tion, Dutrer’s woodcut from the Life of the Virgin, 
is simpler and more “telling,” in that certain non- 
essentials have been eliminated; but could we well 
spare so beautiful a design as that of the candela- 
brum which, in Schongauer’s engraving, stands at 
the foot of the bed? 

From the twelve plates of the Passion, each of 
which repays study, it is not easy to select one for 
reproduction. The Crucifixion, a subject which 
Schongauer engraved no less than six times, has a 
poignant charm; and for sheer beauty the Resur- 
rection 1s among the most significant of the series. 
Pilate Washing His Hands has, however, a double 
interest. The faces of Christ’s tormentors and of 
the figures standing beside and to the left of 
Pilate’s throne, are strongly characterized, por- 
trait-like heads, in marked contrast with the gentle- 


[35] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


ness of Christ, and the weak and vacillating 
Pilate. The enthroned Pilate later reappears as 
the Prophet Daniel in the series of Prophets and 
Sibyls, Florentine engravings in the Fine Manner. 

We have already referred to St. fohn on the 
Island of Patmos by the Master E. S. A more 
significant contrast between the work of the earlier 
engraver and that of Schongauer could hardly be 
found. The Master E. S. gives a multiplicity of 
objects, animate and inanimate, charming and 
interesting in themselves, but distracting from the 
main purpose of the composition—witness the Sz. 
Christopher crossing the river in the middle dis- 
tance, the lion and the terrified horse in the wood 
to the right, the swan in the stream to the left, 
and the life-like birds perched upon the castle- 
crowned cliff. Schongauer eliminates all these 
accessories. One vessel and two small boats alone 
break the calm expanse of the unruffled sea. Save 
for the two plants in the foreground (which betray 
the influence of the Master of the Playing Cards) 
the ground is simply treated and offers little to 
distract our attention from the seated figure of St. 
John, who faces to the left and gazes upwards at 
the Madonna and Child in glory. The eagle bears 
a strong family likeness to the same bird in the 
Design for a Paten by the Master E.S. Schongauer 


has here drawn a tree, not bare, as is his wont, 


[36] 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. ST. JOHN ON THE ISLAND 
OF PATMOS 


Size of the original engraving, 614 x 45 inches 
g g > 4 


In the Kunsthalle, Hamburg 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. CHRIST APPEARING TO THE 
MAGDALEN 
Size of the original engraving, 614 x 6% inches 
In the Kunsthalle, Hamburg 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. VIRGIN SEATED IN A 
COURTYARD 


Size of the original engraving, 634 x 47% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. ANGEL OF THE ANNUNCIATION 


Size of the original engraving, 65 x 41% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


but adorned with foliage beautifully disposed and 
artistically treated, in marked contrast to the con- 
ventional and decorative manner of the Master 
k.. S. and his predecessors. 

The type of the Redeemer, which Schongauer 
has made so peculiarly his own, is nowhere seen to 
better advantage than in the two beautiful plates 
of the Baptism of Christ and Christ Appearing to 
the Magdalen. Max Geisberg acclaims the last- 
named as Schongauer’s most beautiful engraving. 
“Here, the contents of the composition have re- 
ceived an embodiment, the fervor, depth, and deli- 
cacy of which have never been surpassed in art.’’* 
It can, however, share this high praise with the 
Virgin Seated in a Courtyard and the Angel of the An- 
nunctation. For sheer beauty, these plates remain 
to this day not only unsurpassed, but unequalled. 
What quietude and restraint there is in the 
Virgin Seated in a Courtyard, the wall back of her 
discreetly bare, the grass indicated by a few small 
but significant strokes, while the branches of one 
little, leafless tree form an exquisite pattern against 
the untouched sky! By contrast one of Diirer’s 
technical masterpieces—the Virgin Seated by a City 
Wall—seems overworked and overloaded with 
needless accessories. 


* Martin Schongauer. By Dr. Max Geisberg. The Print-Collector’s 
Quarterly. Vol. IV. April, 1914. p. 128. 


[41] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


The Angel of the Annunciation marks the cul- 
mination of Schongauer’s art and belongs to his 
most mature period. Everything not absolutely 
necessary for a clear presentation has been elimi- 
nated. A slight shadow upon the ground gives 
solidity to the figure. All else is blank. The art of 
simplification can hardly go further, and were one 
to be restricted to the choice of a single print by 
any of Diurer’s predecessors, one might wisely 
select the Angel of the Annunctation. 

That Schongauer was equally interested in things 
mundane is convincingly proved by Peasants Going 
to Market, Goldsmith's Apprentices Fighting, or The 
Miller. How well he has differentiated between the 
mother-ass, filled with maternal solicitude, and the 
woolly, stocky, and somewhat foolish little donkey 
which follows, while the miller with upraised staff 
urges her onward. 

The Crozier and the Censer furnish unmistak- 
able proof, were such needed, that as a goldsmith- 
designer, no less than as an engraver, Schongauer 
is entitled to the loftiest place in German art. 
They are masterpieces, alike in invention and in 
execution. His influence was not confined to his 
contemporaries, but can be traced in many ways, 
and in many media, long after his death. His 
School, however, produced no engraver worthy, 
for a moment, of comparison with him. 


[42] 


BUUITA ‘eulqIsq y 9yy ur. 


soyoul 84h x 20 “Suravisua [BUIsIIo0 943 JO 9ZIS 


YATUN FHL YWHOVONOHOS NILYVW 


MARTIN SCHONGAUER. CENSER 


Size of the original engraving, 114 x 84 inches 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


The Masrer L Cz alone seems to have caught 
something of Schongauer’s spirit while, at the same 
time, preserving his own individuality. The face of 
the Redeemer in Christ Entering fFerusalem is rem- 
iniscent of the earlier engraver; and, among the 
Apostles to the left, two, at least, are taken, with 
slight modifications, from Schongauer’s Death of the 
Virgin. 

Christ Tempted has a singular charm. The figure 
of Satan, realistically treated, is an interesting 
example of that passion for the grotesque from 
which even the greatest artists in the North seemed 
unable to shake themselves wholly free. The wood 
in the middle distance, to the left of Christ, evinces 
a close study of natural forms, while the landscape 
takes its place admirably in the composition. The 
excessive rarity of engravings by L Cz alone has 
prevented them from being appreciated at their 
true worth. They are original in composition, full 
of fantasy and charm. Even so universal an artist 
as Albrecht Durer did not disdain to borrow, from 
Christ Tempted, the motive of the mountain goat 
gazing downward, which reappears, slightly modi- 
fied, in ddam and Eve, his masterpiece of the 
year 1504. 


[45] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


GERMAN ENGRAVING: FROM THE BEGINNINGS 
TO MARTIN SCHONGAUER 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Le Pernrre Graveur. By Adam Bartsch. 21 volumes. Vienna: 1803-1821. 
Volumes 6 and 10, Early German Engravers. 

Les DEUX CENTS INCUNABLES XYLOGRAPHIQUES DU D£PARTEMENT DES 
Estampes. By Henri Bouchot. Volume 1, Text. Volume 2, Atlas (191 repro- 
ductions). Paris: Librairie Centrale des Beaux-Arts. 1903. 

GESCHICHTE UND KRITISCHER KATALOG DES DEUTSCHEN, NIEDERLANDISCHEN 
UND FRANZOSISCHEN KuprersTIcHs IM XV. JAHRHUNDERT. By Max Lehrs. 
Vienna: Gesellschaft fiir vervielfaltigende Kunst. Volume 1. The Primitives. 
With portfolio of 114 reproductions on 43 plates. 1908. Volume 2. Master 
E. S. With portfolio of 237 reproductions on g2 plates. Igto. 

Dir ALTESTEN DEUTSCHEN SPIELKARTEN DES KONIGLICHEN KUPFERSTICH- 
CABINETS zU DrespEN. By Max Lehrs. g7 reproductions on 29 plates. 
Dresden: W. Hoffmann. 1885. 

KaTALOG DER IM GERMANISCHEN MuSEUM BEFINDLICHEN DEUTSCHEN Kup- 
FERSTICHE DES XV. JAHRHUNDERTS. By Max Lehrs. 1 original engraving 
and g reproductions. Nurnberg. 1887. 

Le Peinrre-Graveur. By F. D. Passavant. 6 volumes. Leipzig: Rudolph 
Weigel. 1860-1864. Volumes 1 and 2, Early German Engravers. 
HisrorrE DE L’ORIGINE ET DES PROGRES DE LA GRAVURE DANS LES Pays- 
Bas ET EN ALLEMAGNE, JUSQU A LA FIN DU QUINZIEME SIECLE. By Fules 
Renouvier. Brussels: M. Hayez. 1860. 

Diez InKUNABELN DES KuprersticHs IM Kot. Kapinet zu Mincuen. By 
Withelm Schmidt. 32 reproductions. Munich. 1887. 

MANUEL DE L’ AMATEUR DE LA GRAVURE SUR BOIS ET SUR METAL AU XV® 
stkcLE. By Wilhelm Ludwig Schreiber. Volumes 1-4, Text. Volumes 6-8, 
Reproductions. Berlin: Albert Cohn, 1891-1900. (Vol. 4 in Leipzig: O. Har- 
rassowitz.) 

A Descriptive CaTaLoGcue or Earzy Prints in THE BritisH Museum. By 
William Hughes Willshire. 2 volumes. 22 reproductions. London: The 
Trustees. 1879-1883. 


Master OF THE PLayinG Carns (flourished 1440-1450) 


Das ALTESTE GESTOCHENE DEUTSCHE KARTENSPIEL voM MEISTER DER 
SPIELKARTEN (vor 1446). By Max Geisberg. 68 reproductions on 33 plates. 
Strassburg: J. H. Ed. Heitz (Heitz & Miindel). 1905. (Studien zur deutschen 
Kunstgeschichte. Part 66.) 


MAsTER OF THE GARDENS OF Love (flourished 1445-1450) 


Der MeiIsTER DER LIEBESGARTEN; EIN BEITRAG ZUR GESCHICHTE DES 
ALTESTEN KuPFERSTICHS IN DEN NIEDERLANDEN. By Max Lehrs. 28 repro- 
ductions on ro plates. Dresden: Bruno Schulze. 1893. 


[46] 


MASTER L Cz. CHRIST TEMPTED 


Size of the original engraving 834 x 634 inches 


MASTER L Cz. CHRIST ENTERING JERUSALEM 


Size of the original engraving, 874 x 7 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


Master E. S. (flourished 1450-1470) 


Der Meister E. S.; sein NAME, SEINE HEImaT, UND SEIN Enpe. By Peter 
P. Albert. 20 reproductions on 16 plates. Strassburg: J. H. Ed. Heitz (Heitz 
& Miindel). 1911. (Studien zur deutschen Kunstgeschichte. Part 137.) 


Tue Master E. S. anp THE “Ars Mortenp1”; A CHaprer IN THE History 
or Encravinec Durine THE FirreentH Century. By Lionel Cust. 46 re- 
productions. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1898. 


Diz ANFANGE DES DEUTSCHEN. KupreRSTICHES UND DER Meister E. S. 
By Max Geisberg. 121 reproductions on 71 plates. Leipzig: Klinkhardt & 
Biermann. 1909. (Meister der Graphik. Vol. 2.) 


GESCHICHTE UND KRITISCHER KATALOG DES DEUTSCHEN, NIEDERLANDISCHEN 
UND FRANZOSISCHEN KuPFrERSTICHS IM XV. JAHRHUNDERT. By Max Lehrs. 
Vienna: Gesellschaft fiir vervielfaltigende Kunst. 1908-1910. Volume 2. 
Master E. S. With portfolio of 237 reproductions on g2 plates. 


Tue Payne Carns or THE Master E. S. or 1466. Edited by Max Lehrs. 
45 reproductions. London: Asher & Co. 1892. (International Chalcograph- 
ical Society. Extraordinary Publication. Vol..1.) 


SCHONGAUER, MartIN (1445(?)—1491) 


ZWEI DATIERTE ZEICHNUNGEN Martin Scuoncauers. By Sidney Colvin. 
2 illustrations. Jahrbuch der kéniglichen preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 


Vol. 6, pp. 69-74. Berlin. 1885. 


Martin Scooncavuer’s Kuprersticue. By Max G. Friedlinder. 5 illus- 
trations. Zeitschrift fiir bildende Kunst, Vol. 26, pp. 105-112. Leipzig. 1915. 


Martin ScHoncaver. By Max Geisberg. 14 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 102-129. Boston. 1914. 


Martin Scooncauer; NACHBILDUNGEN SEINER KupEERSTICHE. Edited by 
Max Lehrs. 115 reproductions on 72 plates. Berlin: Bruno Cassirer. 1914. 
(Graphische Gesellschaft. Extraordinary Publication 5.) 


Scnoncaverstupien. By Wilhelm Lubke. 3 illustrations. Zeitschrift fur 
bildende Kunst, Vol. 16, pp. 74-86. Leipzig. 1881. 


SCHONGAUER UND DER MersTer pes BarrHotomius. By L. Scheibler. 
Repertorium fiir Kunstwissenschaft, Vol. 7, pp. 31-68. Berlin and Stutt- 
gart. 1884. 


Martin ScHONGAUER ALS KuprersTECHER. By Woldemar von Seidlitz. 
Repertorium fiir Kunstwissenschaft, Vol. 7, pp. 169-182. Berlin and Stutt- 
gart. 1884. 


Martin SCHONGAUER ALS KuprersTEcHER. By Hans Wendland. 32 repro- 
ductions. Berlin: Edmund Meyer. 1907. 


Martin ScHONGAUER. EINE KRITISCHE UNTERSUCHUNG SEINES LEBENS 
UND SEINER WERKE NEBST EINEM CHRONOLOGISCHEN VERZEICHNISSE SEINER 
Kuprersticue. By Alfred von Wurzbach. Vienna: Manz’sche K. K. Hof- 
verlags und Universitats Buchhandlung. 1880. 


[49] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Master OF THE BANDEROLES (flourished c. 1464) 


Der MEIsTER MIT DEN BANDROLLEN; EIN BerrraG zuR GESCHICHTE DES 
ALTESTEN Kuprersticus IN. Deutscuianp. By Max Lehrs. 19 reproduc- 
tions on 7 plates. Dresden: W. Hoffmann. 1886. 


MEcKENEM, IsRAHEL VAN (c. 1440-1503) 


Der MEIsTER DER BERLINER Passion UND IsrAHEL VAN MECKENEM. By 
Max Geisberg. 6 reproductions. Strassburg: J. H. Ed. Heitz (Heitz & 
Miindel). 1903. (Studien zur deutschen Kunstgeschichte. Part 42.) 


VERZEICHNIS DER KuprersticHe Isranets van Meckenem. By Max Geis- 
berg. 11 reproductions on g plates. Strassburg: J. H. Ed. Heitz (Heitz & 
Miindel). 1905. (Studien zur deutschen Kunstgeschichte. Part 58.) 


Master WT (flourished c. 1470) 


Der MEISTER W 4; EIN KUPFERSTECHER DER ZEIT Kars Des KUHnen. 
By Max Lehrs. 77 reproductions on 31 plates. Dresden: W. Hoffmann. 


1895. 

Stross, VEIT (c. 1450-c. 1533) 

Veir Stross; NAcHBILDUNGEN SEINER Kuprersticue. Edited by Engelbert 
Baumeister. 13 reproductions. Berlin: Bruno Cassirer. 1913. (Graphische 
Gesellschaft. Publication 17.) 

O_mtrz, WENZEL von (flourished 1480-1500) 


Wenzet von Oimiirz. By Max Lehrs. 22 reproductions on 11 plates. 
Dresden: W. Hoffmann. 1889 (In German.) 


[50] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING: 
THE FLORENTINES 


NGRAVING in Italy differs, in many essen- 

tials, from the art as practised in Germany. 
Germany may claim priority in point of time, but 
it 1s doubtful whether the Florentines—for in 
Florence, and among the goldsmiths, the art took 
its rise in Italy—in the beginning were influenced 
by, or even acquainted with, the work of their 
northern contemporaries. In Germany the designer 
and the engraver were one, and some of the greatest 
masters embodied their finest conceptions in their 
prints. We may truly say that the world-wide 
reputation which Dtirer and Schongauer have en- 
joyed for four centuries and more, rests almost 
entirely upon their engraved, rather than upon 
their painted, work. 

In Italy it was otherwise. There, with a few signal 
exceptions, engraving was used merely as a con- 
venient method of multiplying an existing design. 
It may be that we owe to this fact both the color of 
the ink used in these early Florentine prints, and the 
method of taking impressions. This would seem, in 
many cases, to be by rubbing rather than by the 


[sr] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


use of the roller press, which appears to have been 
known and used in the North substantially from 
the very beginning. The Florentine, aiming to 
duplicate a drawing in silver-point or wash, would 
naturally endeavor to approximate the color of his 
original. Consequently we do not find the lus- 
trous black impressions, strongly printed, which 
are the prize of the collector of early German en- 
gravings. 

Vasari’s story of the invention of engraving by 
Maso Finicuerra (1426-1464) was long ago dis- 
proved, and for a time it seemed as though Fini- 
guerra and his work were likely to be consigned to 
that limbo of the legendary from which Baldini—at © 
one time accredited with many prints—is only just 
now emerging. Yet Finiguerra, although not the 
“inventor” of the art, is, beyond peradventure, the 
most important influence in early Italian engraving, 
not only on account of his own work on copper, 
but still more through the Picture-Chronicle, which 
served as an inspiration to the artists working in 
his School and continuing his tradition after his 
death. So that Vasari’s tale, though not accurate 
in the matter of fact, was veracious in the larger 
sense. ; 

The Picture-Chronicle is a book of drawings 
illustrating the History of the World, and evidently 
proceeds from the hand and workshop of a Floren- 


[52] 


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ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. PROFILE 
PORTRAIT OF A LADY 
Size of the original engraving, 874 x 534 inches 
In the Royal Print Room, Berlin 


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ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


tine goldsmith-engraver of about 1460. It was 
acquired by the British Museum from Mr. Ruskin 
in 1888. The drawings are in pen and ink and wash, 
often reinforced with open pen-shading like that 
imitated later by the Broad Manner engravers. 
At its best the work has the true early Renaissance 
combination of archaic strength with attractive 
naivete—the ornamental detail carried out with a 
masterly power of pen, and with the patient delight 
of one who 1s by instinct and training above all 
things a jeweler. 

Finiguerra’s fame as the leading worker in niello 
was firmly established by 1450; and although we 
cannot assign certainly any engraving by him to a 
date earlier than 1460, there is a group of Florentine 
primitives which may be placed between the years 
1450 and 1460, thus antedating Finiguerra’s first 
plate by about ten years. The most beautiful of 

these early prints in conception, and the purest in 
execution, is the Profile Portrait of a Lady, a single 
impression of which has come down to us and is 
now in Berlin. In style it recalls the paintings of 
Piero della Francesca, Verrocchio, Uccello, or Pol- 
laiuolo, and although it would be unwise to attrib- 
ute it to any known master, there is a sensitive 
quality in the drawing, and a restraint, which dif- 
ferentiates it from any other print of this period. 

Among the engravings which may be by Fini- 


[55] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


guerra himself, one of the most interesting is the 
plate of Wild Animals Hunting and Fighting, where- 
in we see a number of motives taken directly from 
the Picture-Chronicle—motives which reappear 
again and again in works undoubtedly by other 
hands. This print, as also the Encounter of a Hunt- 
ing Party with a Family of Wild Folk, is unique. In 
the last-named we see a number of motives re- 
peated from the Wild Animals Hunting and Fight- 
ing: such as the boar being pulled down by two 
hounds, the hound chasing a hare, in the upper 
right corner; and the dog, slightly to the left, de- 
vouring the entrails of yet another hare. 

The Road to Calvary and the Crucifixion is a far 
more elaborate and important composition, and in 
this engraving we see that which 1s especially note- 
worthy in the Fudgment Hall of Pilate—the largest 
and most important of all the Fine Manner prints 
—the goldsmith’s love of ornament. In the Fudg- 
ment Hall of Pilate the head-dresses, and especially 
the armor, are highly elaborate, while the architec- 
ture itself is overlaid with ornate decoration di- 
rectly drawn from the Picture-Chronicle. In the 
only known impression the plate seems to have 
been re-worked, in the Broad Manner, by a later 
hand. 

Somewhat later in date, by an engraver of the 
Finiguerra School, is the Trzumphal Procession of 


[56] 


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ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. JUPITER 


Size of the original engraving, 125¢ x 8% inches 
In the British Museum 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


Bacchus and Ariadne, the most joyous of all Flor- 
entine engravings. The original design was attrib- 
uted at one time to Botticelli; and although, as 
Herbert P. Horne has shown, it cannot be by 
this master, it is similar in style to his compositions. 
Whatever the immediate original, it shows marked 
traces of classical influences, and its motive is 
directly derived from antique sculpture—a sar- 
cophagus in all probability. “The splendid design 
has suffered not only from the feebleness of the 
engraving, but also from the florid manner in which 
the engraver has exaggerated some of the decora- 
tive details and added others . . . In spite of 
the feebleness of its execution it remains an incom- 
parably greater work of art than any other print 
in the Fine Manner.’’* 

The Fine Manner, in which all of the engravings 
hitherto mentioned are executed, owes its name to 
the method employed. The engraver has incised 
his outlines upon the plate—probably unbeaten 
copper or some even softer metal—and for his 
shading has employed a system of delicate strokes, 
laid close to one another and overlaid with two, 
and, at times, three, sets of cross-hatching. Such 
engravings, when printed, as is usually the case, in 
a greenish or grayish ink, give a result similar to a - 


*Sandro Botticelli. By Herbert P. Horne. London: George Bell & 
Sons. 1908. p. 84. 


[59] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


wash drawing. In the Broad Manner the style of 
engraving is based upon that of pen drawing, with 
open, diagonal shade strokes and without cross- 
hatching. The Broad Manner was finally developed 
by Pollaiuolo and Mantegna, who modified it by a 
series of delicate lines laid at an acute angle to the 
heavier shadings, blending the main lines into a 
harmonious whole. 

“None of the sciences that descended from an- 
tiquity,” writes Arthur M. Hind,* “possessed a 
firmer hold on the popular imagination of the 
Middle Ages than that of Astrology. That science 
took as its foundation the ancient conception of 
the universe, with the earth as the centre round 
which all the heavenly bodies revolved in the space 
of a day and a night. Encircling the earth were 
the successive spheres of water, air, fire, the seven 
planets (Moon, Mercury, Venus, Sun, Mars, Ju- 
piter, Saturn), the firmament with the constella- 
tions (the celum crystallinum), and the Primum 
Mobile. To each of the planets were ascribed at- 
tributes according to the traditional character of 
the deity whose name it bore, and these attributes 
were regarded as transmissible under certain con- 
ditions to mankind. The influence of the planets 
depended on their position in the heavens in re- 


* Catalogue of Early Italian Engravings . . . in the British Museum. 
By Arthur Mayger Hind. London. 1gr1o. pp. 49-50. 


[60] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


spect of the various constellations, with which each 
had different relations. Each planet had what was 
called its ‘house’ in one of the constellations, and 
according to its position relative to these was said 
to be in the ‘ascendant’ or ‘descendant’. In regard 
to individual human beings the date of birth was 
the decisive point, and the degree of influence 
transmitted from the planets depended on the re- 
spective degree of “ascendance’ or ‘descendance’ at 
the particular epoch.” 

The planets and their influences afforded sub- 
ject matter for many artists of the fifteenth and 
sixteenth centuries, and the finest and most im- 
portant series is that engraved in the Fine Manner 
by an artist of the Finiguerra School, who has, as 
usual, drawn directly upon the Picture-Chronicle 
for his ornamental accessories. We can reproduce 
two only from the set of seven—Yupiter and Mer- 
cury. The inscription beneath Fupiter reads, in 
part, as follows: “Jupiter is a male planet in the 
sixth sphere, warm and moist, temperate by nature, 
and of gentle disposition; he is sanguine, cheerful, 
liberal, eloquent; he loves fine clothes, is handsome 
and ruddy of aspect, and looks toward the Earth. 
Tin is his metal; his days are Sunday and Thurs- 
day, with the first, eighth, fifteenth and twenty- 
fourth hours; his night is that of Wednesday; he 
is friendly to the Moon, hostile to Mars & 


[61] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


In the landscape we again meet with several of 
the stock Finiguerra motives, the muzzled hounds, 
the dog chasing the hare, etc. Of especial interest 
is the group at the right—‘‘wing-bearing Dante who 
flew through Hell, through the starry Heavens and 
o’er the intermediate hill of Purgatory beneath the 
beauteous brows of Beatrice; and Petrarch too, 
who tells again the tale of Cupid’s triumph; and 
the man who, in ten days, portrays a hundred 
stories (Boccaccio).”’ 

Mercury—‘“‘eloquent and inventive . . . slender 
of figure, tall and well grown, with delicate lips. 
Quicksilver is his metal’’—sets forth various appli- 
cations of the arts and sciences. Especially inter- 
esting is the goldsmith’s shop at the left, where we 
see an engraver actually at work upon a plate. 
The goldsmith is seated, his apprentice behind him, 
as a prospective purchaser examines a richly orna- 
mented vessel. In the foreground a sculptor is 
chiseling his statue, while, standing above, on a 
scaffolding, a fresco painter is actively at work— 
a record of the Florence of 1460 or thereabouts, 
full of interest for us. 

To a slightly later date, 1465-1470, belong the 
group of Fine Manner prints, known as the Orro 
Prints, also emanating from the Finiguerra work- 
shop. They are not a series, in any true sense, and 
owe their name—also their fortunate preservation 


[62] 


‘TE OVERO NVAMILIAEL 
OTTE VA FIZ tENGNI IN’ 
RE VA VN 2ENGNO & ; ue 
eee a . : 


FAD alt Dice oat sak 


ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. MERCURY 


Size of the original engraving, 1234 x 834 inches 
In the British Museum 


ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. LADY 
WITH A UNICORN 


Size of the original engraving, 634 inches in diameter 
In the British Museum 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


—to the accidental circumstance of their having 
belonged at one time to Peter Ernst Otto, a mer- 
chant and collector of Leipzig. The purpose served 
by these prints—twenty-four in all—was the deco- 
ration of box lids, either as patterns to be copied, 
in the case of metal caskets, or to be colored and 
pasted on the lids of wooden boxes. The escutch- 
eons are usually left blank, to be filled in by hand 
with the device of the donor or the recipient, or 
with some appropriate sentiment. 

In the print entitled Two Heads in Medallions 
and Two Hunting Scenes we again meet with the 
animal motives taken from the Picture-Chronicle. 
One of the most charming is the Lady with a 
Unicorn (Chastity), in its arrangement suggest- 
ive of the beautiful drawing by Leonardo da Vinci 
in the British Museum; and its symbolic meaning 
is doubtless the same. ‘““The unicorn,” writes Leo- 
nardo in his “‘Bestiarius,”’ “is distinguished for lack 
of moderation and self-control. His passionate love 
of young women makes him entirely forget his 
shyness and ferocity. Oblivious of all dangers, he 
comes straight to the seated maiden and falling 
asleep in her lap is then caught by the hunter.” 
The ermine, likewise a sign of chastity, is to be 
seen at the right, gazing upward into Marietta’s 
face. 

Still later than the Otto prints, and greatly in- 


[65] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


ferior to them in execution, are the three illustra- 
tions for // Monte Sancto di Dio, of 1477; and the 
nineteen engravings for Dante’s Divina Commedia, 
with Landino’s Commentary, of 1481. J/ Monte 
Sancto di Dio is the first book in Italy or in Germany 
in which there appear illustrations from engraved 
plates printed on the text page. This entailed 
much additional labor, and was soon discon- 
tinued in favor of the wood-block, which could be 
printed simultaneously with the letterpress, and 
was not taken up again until nearly the end of the 
sixteenth century. 

Alike by tradition and internal evidence, Botti- 
celli is unquestionably the author of the Dante 
designs; but no artist has been suggested as the 
probable designer of the three illustrations for 
Il Monte Sancto di Dio. In the first illustration the 
costume and general attitude of the young gallant 
to the left are strongly reminiscent of the Otto 
prints. The lower portion of the plate shows all the 
characteristics of the Fine Manner, but the angel 
heads are treated in a simpler and more open linear 
method. The Christian’s Ascent to the Glory of Para- 
dise is allegorically represented by a ladder placed 
firmly in the ground of widespread Knowledge and 
Humility, and reaching up to the triple mountain 
of Faith, Hope, and Charity, on the summit of 
which stands the Saviour. This ladder is called Per- 


[66] 


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ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. DANTE AND VIRGIL WITH THE VISION 


OF BEATRICE. FROM THE “DIVINA COMMEDIA,” FLORENCE, 1481 


Size of the original engraving, 334 x 67% inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


severance, one of its sides being Prayer, the other 
Sacrament. It has eleven steps: Prudence, Tem- 
perance, Fortitude, Justice, etc. 

The second illustration depicts the glory of Para- 
dise; the third the punishment of Hell, the main 
motives of the last-named being adapted from the 
fresco attributed to Orcagna, in the Campo Santo 
at Pisa. 

In the illustrations to the Divina Commedia, of 
1481, there is little left of the beauty which the 
original designs must have possessed. They are, 
indeed, “disguised into puerility by the feebleness 
of the engraver’’; but, none the less, they remain, 
with the exception of Botticelli’s superb series of 
drawings on vellum, in Berlin and in the Vatican, 
unquestionably the best, one might say the ov/y, 
satisfactory illustrations of Dante’s text. No known 
copy contains more than the first three engravings 
printed directly upon the page itself. In every 
other case, where a greater number of illustrations 
appear, they are printed separately and pasted in 
place, indicating the difficulty experienced by the 
Renaissance printer in making his plates register 
with the letterpress. 

The first print of the series shows Dante lost in 
the wood, emerging therefrom, and his meeting 
with Virgil—three subjects on a single plate. The 
second represents Dante and Virgil with the Vision 


[69] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


of Beatrice. Dante and Virgil are seen twice—first 
to the left, where Dante doubts whether to follow 
the guidance of Virgil further, and again on the 
slope of the hill to the right, where Virgil relates 
how the vision of Beatrice appeared to him. Near 
the summit of the rocky mountain is seen the 
entrance to Hell. 

“Of the extant engravings in the Broad Manner, 
unquestionably the most remarkable is the large 
print on two sheets of the dssumption of the Virgin, 
after Botticelli. The original design [no longer 
known to exist], whether drawing or painting, from 
which this engraving was taken, must have been 
among the grandest and most vigorous works of 
the last period of Botticelli’s art. The large and 
rugged treatment of the figures of the apostles, 
their strange mane-like hair and beards, their fer- 
vent and agitated gestures and attitudes, lend to 
this part of the design a forcible and primitive 
character, which recalls, though largely, perhaps, 
in an accidental fashion, the grand and impressive 
art of Andrea del Castagno. Not less vigorous in 
conception, but of greater beauty of form and 
movement, is the figure of the Virgin, and the 
motive and arrangement of the angels who form a 
‘mandorla’ around her are among the most lovely 
and imaginative of the many inventions of the kind 


[79] 


ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. ASSUMPTION 
OF THE VIRGIN (After Botticelli) 


Size of the original engraving, 3254 x 2234 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


uefte e colui:chel mondo chiama amore E i nacque docioy &di lafeiuia humana’ | 
~ Amaro chome vedi, Kuedrimegio Wuteito di penfierdolci &fonuis it 
Quando fa tuo/chomenoftro fignore. Facto fignor®diodagente wana 


ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. TRIUMPH OF 
LOVE. FROM THE TRIUMPHS OF PETRARCH. 
Size of the original engraving, 1034 x 634 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


which Botticelli has left us.”* In the distant valley 
is a view of Rome showing the Pantheon, the Col- 
umn of Trajan, the Colosseum, and other buildings. 

If the Assumption of the Virgin is the noblest 
print in the Broad Manner, the Triumphs of Pe- 
trarch—a set of six prints—may be said to possess, 
the greatest charm, not less by its subject than by 
its treatment. Petrarch first saw Laura on April 6, 
1327, in the Church of Santa Clara at Avignon, and 
“in the same city, on the same 6th day of the same 
month of April, in the year 1348, the bright light 
of her life was taken away from the light of this 
earth.” The poet’s aim in composing these Trionfi 
is the same which he proposed to himself in the 
Canzoniere: namely, “to return in thought, from 
time to time, now to the beginning, now to the 
progress, and now to the end of his passion, taking 
by the way frequent opportunities of rendering 
praise and honor to the single and exalted object of 
his love. To reach this aim he devised a description 
of man in his various conditions of life, wherein 
he might naturally find occasion to speak of him- 
self and of his Laura. 

“Man in his first stage of youth is the slave of 
appetites, which may all be included under the 
generic name of Love, or Self-Love. But as he 


*Sandro Botticelli. By Herbert P. Horne. London:’ George Bell & 
Sons. 1908. p. 289. 


[73] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


gains understanding, he sees the impropriety of 
such a condition, so that he strives advisedly against 
those appetites and overcomes them by means of 
Cuastiry, that is, by denying himself the oppor- 
tunity of satisfying them. Amid these struggles and 
victories DEaTH overtakes him and makes victors 
and vanquished equal by taking them all out of the 
world. Nevertheless, it has no power to destroy the 
memory of a man, who by illustrious and honorable 
deeds seeks to survive his own death. Such a man 
truly lives through a long course of ages by means 
of his Fame. But Time at length obliterates all 
memory of him, and he finds, in the last resort, that 
his only sure hope of living forever is by joy in 
God and by partaking with God in his blessed 
ETERNITY. 

“Thus Love triumphs over man, CHasTiTy over 
Love, and Deatu over both alike; Fame triumphs 
over Deatu, Time over Fame, and ETERNITY over 
TimeE.”’* 

With the exception of the first plate, The Tri- 
umph of Love, none of these engravings illustrates, 
in any strict sense of the word, the text of Pe- 
trarch’s poem. It is the spirit which the engraver 
has interpreted. Who may have been the designer 


* Le Rime di Francesco Petrarca con linterpretazione di Giacomo 
Leopardi . . . egliargomenti di A. Marsand. Florence. 1839. p. 866. 
Translation in, Petrarch: His Life and Times. By H. C. Hollway-Calthrop, 
London. 1907. pp. 41-42. 


[74] 


LE ta lalor wictoriafa infegr 
* In campo uerdeun cadido hetmellin 


ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. TRIUMPH OF 
CHASTITY. FROM THE TRIUMPHS OF PETRARCH 
Size of the original engraving, 10 x 634 inches 
In the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University 


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SEDRA®W ESTO RESANTO EVIVENLTE 


ANONYMOUS FLORENTINE, XV CENTURY. LIBYAN SIBYL 


Size of the original engraving, 7 x 414 inches 
In the British Museum 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


we know not, but they show certain affinities to the 
work of Pesellino and Baldovinetti. 

In the first plate, Cupid, the blind archer, with 
flame-tipped arrow, is poised upon a ball rising 
from a flaming vase, the base of which, in its turn, 
rests upon flame. Jupiter(?), chained, is seated in 
the front of the car, while Samson, bearing a 
column, walks upon the further side. Four pran- 
cing steeds draw the car; behind, Love’s victims 
follow in endless procession. In the second plate, 
Chastity stands upon an urn; in front of her kneels 
Cupid, still blindfolded, with his broken arrow be- 
side him. Two unicorns, symbols of chastity, draw 
the car, while upon the banner borne by the maiden 
at the extreme right there appears the symbolic 
ermine. Then follow in order the Triumphs of 
Death, of Fame, of Time, and of Eternity. 

This series of illustrations reappears, somewhat 
modified and simplified, in the form of woodcuts, 
in the editions of the Trionfi published in Venice 
in 1488, 1490, 1492, and in Florence in 1499. 

We have already referred to the Evangelists and 
Apostles engraved by the German, Master E. S. of 
1466. It is from him that the anonymous Floren- 
tine engraver borrowed his figures, in many cases 
leaving the form of the drapery unchanged but 
enriching it with elaborate designs in the manner 
of Finiguerra. The Prophet Ezekie/ is thus com- 


[77 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


pounded of St. Fohn and St. Peter, while Amos 1s 
copied in reverse from St. Paul. The seated figure 
of Daniel, in its turn, is derived from Martin 
Schongauer’s engraving, Christ Before Pilate, but 
the throne upon which he is seated is strongly 
reminiscent of the Picture-Chronicle, and like- 
wise recalls Botticelli’s early painting of Fortitude. 
The Tiburtine Sibyl is derived from St. Matthew, 
who, in changing his position, has likewise changed 
his sex. The precedent thus established has been 
followed by Sz. ‘ohn, transformed into the Libyan 
Sibyl in the Fine Manner, with the addition of a 
flying veil, to the right, copied from the Woman 
with the Escutcheon, also by the Master E. S. In the 
Broad Manner print the figure of this Sibyl gains 
in dignity by the elimination of much superfluous 
ornament upon her outer garment, and from the 
fact that she now sits in a more upright posture, 
the Fine Manner print still suggesting the crouch- 
ing attitude of its Northern prototype. It is to the 
influence, if not to the hand, of Botticelli that such 
improvement is most likely due. 

The twenty-four Prophets and the twelve Szby/s, 
engraved both in the Fine and in the Broad Manner 
of the Finiguerra School, are individually and col- 
lectively among the most delightful productions of 
Italian art. It was doubtless as illustrations of 
mystery plays or pageants in Florence that this 


[78] 


ANONYMOUS NORTH ITALIAN, XV CENTURY. THE 
GENTLEMAN. FROM THE TAROCCHI PRINTS 
(E Series) 


Size of the original engraving, 724 x 4 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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ANONYMOUS NORTH ITALIAN, XV CENTURY. CLIO. 
FROM THE TAROCCHI PRINTS (S Series) 
Size of the original engraving, 72 x 4 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


series of engravings was designed, and we are able 
to reconstruct from the Triumphs of Petrarch, and 
from these prints, a Florentine street pageant at 
its loveliest. 

However great their beauty and however strong 
the fascination which they exert, they have a rival 
in the series of fifty instructive prints, which, for 
many years, were miscalled the Tarocchi Cards of 
Mantegna. Tarocchi cards they are not, and of 
Mantegna’s influence, direct or indirect, there 
would seem to be no trace whatsoever. They are 
of North Italian origin and are the work, in all 
probability, of some anonymous Venetian en- 
graver, working from Venetian or Ferrarese origi- 
nals, about 1465—contemporary, therefore, with 
the Florentine engravings of the Prophets and Sibyls. 
Forming, apparently, a pictorial cyclopeedia of the 
medieval universe, with its systematic classifica- 
tion of the various powers of Heaven and Earth, 
they divide themselves into five groups of ten cards 
each. First we have the ranks and conditions of 
men from Beggar to Pope; next Apollo and the nine 
Muses; then the Liberal Arts, with the addition 
of Poetry, Philosophy, and Theology, in order to 
make up the ten; next the Seven Virtues, the set 
being brought up to the required number by the 
addition of Chronico, the genius of Time, Cosmico, 
the genius of the Universe, and l/iaco, the genius 


[81] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


of the Sun. The fifth group is based on the Seven 
Planets, together with the Sphere of the Fixed 
Stars and the Primum Mobile, which imparts its 
own revolving motion to all the spheres within it; 
and enfolding all the Empyrean Sphere, the abode 
of Heavenly Wisdom. 

Much wisdom and many words have been ex- 
pended upon the still unsolved riddle as to which 
of the two sets, known respectively as the E series 
and the S series (from the letters which appear in 
the lower left-hand corners of the ten cards of the 
Sorts and Conditions of Men) may claim priority of 
date. Both series are in the Fine Manner, the out- 
lines clearly defined, the shadings and modelling 
indicated with delicate burin strokes, crossed and 
re-crossed so as to give a tonal effect. These delicate 
strokes soon wore out in printing, and the struc- 
tural lines of the figures then emerge in all their 
beauty. It may seem absurd that one should ad- 
mire impressions from plates obviously worn, but 
the critic would do well to suspend his condemna- 
tion, since the Tarocchi Prints present many and 
manifold forms of beauty—in the early impressions 
a delicate and bloom-like quality; in certain some- 
what later proofs, a charm of line which recalls the 
art of the Far East. 

The Gentleman is the fifth in order in the first 
group of the Sorts and Conditions of Men, and is 


[82] 


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ANONYMOUS NORTH ITALIAN, XV CENTURY. THE SUN. 
FROM THE TAROCCHI PRINTS (E Series) 
Size of the original engraving, 714 x 4 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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ANONYMOUS NORTH ITALIAN, XV CENTURY. ANGEL OF 


THE EIGHTH SPHERE. FROM THE TAROCCHI PRINTS 


(E Series) 
Size of the original engraving, 714 x 4 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


from the so-called E series (claimed by Sir Sidney 
Colvin and Mr. Arthur M. Hind, of the British 
Museum, to be the earlier of the two sets). The 
sequence runs: (1) The Beggar, (2) The Servant, 
(3) The Artisan, (4) The Merchant, (5) The Gen- 
tleman, (6) The Knight, (7) The Doge, (8) The 
King, (g) The Emperor, (10) The Pope. 

Clio is the ninth of the Muses and is from the 
S series (placed first in point of time, by Kristeller, 
and about ten years later than the E series, by the 
British Museum authorities). 

The Sun naturally finds his place in the group of 
Planets and Spheres. There is a delightful and 
childish touch in the way in which PAeton 1s pic- 
tured as a little boy falling headlong into the river 
Po, which conveniently flows immediately beneath 
him. To this group belongs likewise the dngel of the 
Eighth Sphere, the Sphere of the Fixed Stars, one 
of the loveliest prints in the entire set, both in 
arrangement and in execution. 

Nothing could be in greater contrast to the grace- 
fulness of such a print as the above than the Battle 
of Naked Men by Anronio PoLLaiuoLo, “the stu- 
pendous Florentine” —if one may borrow Dante’s 
title; but, for the moment, we will hold Pollaiuolo 
and his one engraving in reserve while we glance at 
the work of CHritsrorano Rospetrta, who, born in 
Florence in 1462, was consequently the junior of 


[85] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Pollaiuolo by thirty years. As an engraver, Robetta 
is inferior to the anonymous master to whom we 
owe the E series of the Tarocchi prints. His style 

is somewhat dry, and the individual lines are lack- 
ing in beauty; but his plates have that indefinable 
and indescribable fascination and charm which is 
the peculiar possession of Italian engraving and of 
the Florentine masters in particular. The shaping 
influences which determined his choice and treat- 
ment of subject are Botticelli, and, in a much 
larger measure, Filippino Lippi, though only in a 
few cases can he be shown to have worked directly 
from that painter’s designs. The /4doration of the 
Magi is obviously inspired by Filippino Lippi’s 
painting in the Uffizi, though whether Robetta 
actually worked from the painting itself, or, as 
seems more probable, translated one of Filippino’s 
drawings, is an interesting question. The fact that 
the engraving is in reverse of the painting proves 
nothing; but there are so many points of difference 
between them—notably the introduction of the 
charming group of three angels above the Virgin 
and Child—that one can hardly think Robetta 
would have needlessly made so many and impor- 
tant modifications of the painting itself,if a drawing 
had been available. It is interesting, though of 
minor importance, that the hat of the King to 
the right, which lies on the ground, is copied in 


[86] 


CRISTOFANO ROBETTA. ADORATION OF THE MAGI 


Size of the original engraving, 1134 x 11 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


reverse from Schongauer’s 4doration, and that the 
Allegory of the Power of Love, one of Robetta’s most 
charming subjects, is engraved upon the reverse 
side of the plate of the 4doration of the Magi, the 
copper-plate itself being now in the Print Room 
of the British Museum. Whether the d/egory of 
Abundance is entirely Robetta’s, or whether the 
design was suggested by another master’s painting 
or drawing, can be only a matter of conjecture. It 
shows, however, so many of the characteristics 
which we associate with his work that we may give 
him the benefit of the doubt and consider him as 
its “‘onlie begetter.” 

Hercules and the Hydra and Hercules and Anteus 
show so markedly the influence of Pollaiuolo that 
we may conclude them to have been taken from 
the two small panels in the Uffizi; though, in the 
case of the first named, Pollaiuolo’s original sketch, 
now in the British Museum, may also: have served 
Robetta. 

Whether Pottatuo_o based his technical method 
upon that of Mantegna and his School, or whether 
Mantegna’s own engravings were inspired by his 
Florentine contemporary, is an interesting, but 
thus far unanswered, question. Pollaiuolo’s one 
print, the Battle of Naked Men, 1s engraved in the 
Broad Manner, somewhat modified by the use of a 
light stroke laid at an acute angle between the 


[89] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


parallels. The outlines of the figures are strongly 
incised; while the treatment of the background 
lends color to the supposition that, in his youth, 
Pollaiuolo engraved in niello, as well as furnished 
designs to be executed by Finiguerra and _ his 
School. In this masterpiece the artist has summed 
up his knowledge of the human form, and has ex- 
pressed, in a more convincing and vigorous meas- 
ure than has any other engraver in the history of 
the art, the strain and stress of violent motion and 
the fury of combat. 

“What is it,” asks Bernhard Berenson, “that 
makes us return to this sheet with ever-renewed, 
ever-increased pleasure? Surely it is not the 
hideous faces of most of the figures and their 
scarcely less hideous bodies. Nor is it the pattern 
as decorative design, which is of great beauty in- 
deed, but not at all in proportion to the spell ex- 
erted upon us. Least of all is it—for most of us— 
an interest in the technique or history of engraving. 
No, the pleasure we take in these savagely battling 
forms arises from their power to directly communi- 
cate life, to immensely heighten our sense of vital- 
ity. Look at the combatant prostrate on the 
ground and his assailant, bending over, each intent 
on stabbing the other. See how the prostrate man 
plants his foot on the thigh of his enemy and note 
the tremendous energy he exerts to keep off the 


[90] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


foe, who, turning as upon a pivot, with his grip on 
the other’s head, exerts no less force to keep the 
advantage gained. The significance of all these 
muscular strains and pressures is so rendered that 
we cannot help realizing them; we imagine our- 
selves imitating all the movements and exerting 
the force required for them—and all without the 
least effort on our side. If all this without moving 
a muscle, what should we feel if we too had ex- 
erted ourselves? And thus while under the spell of 
this illusion—this hypereesthesia not bought with 
drugs and not paid for with cheques drawn on our 
vitality—we feel as if the elixir of life, not our own 
sluggish blood, were coursing through our veins.’’* 

Pollaiuolo is the one great original engraver 
Florence produced, and with him we bring to a 
close our all too brief study of Florentine engraving. 


* Florentine Painters of the Renaissance. By Bernhard Berenson. 
New York: Putnam’s Sons. 1899. pp. 54-55. 


[gt] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING: THE FLORENTINES 
BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Le Peinrre Graveur. By Adam Bartsch. 21 volumes. Vienna: 1803-1821. 
Volume 13, Early Italian Engravers. 

Tue Drawincs or THE FLORENTINE Parnters. By Bernhard Berenson. 
2 volumes. 180 illustrations. New York: E.P. Dutton & Company. 1903. 
CaTALOGuE OF Earty Iratian ENGRAVINGS PRESERVED IN THE DEPARTMENT 
oF Prints AND DRAWINGS IN THE British Museum. By Arthur Mayger Hind. 
Edited by Sidney Colvin. 20 illustrations. London: The Trustees. 1gio. 
SS PUUNStratiOnsntOnues eat lOpicy: simmrn niet 198 plates. London: 
The Trustees. 1909. 

Some Earty Iratian EncrAvERS BEFORE THE TIME or Marcantonio. By 
Arthur Mayger Hind. 22 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 
2, No. 3, pp. 253-289. Boston. 1912. 

SULLE ORIGINI DELL’INCISIONE IN RAME IN Itatta. By Paul Kristeller. 4 
illustrations. Archivio Storico dell’Arte, Vol. 6, p. 391-400. Rome. 1893. 
Le Peintre-Graveur. By F. D. Passavant. 6 volumes. Leipzig: Rudolph 
Weigel. 1860-1864. Volumes 1 and 5, Early Italian Engravers. 

Des Types ET DES MANIERES DES MAITRES GRAVEURS ... . EN ITALIE, 
EN ALLEMAGNE, DANS LES Pays-Bas ET EN France. By Fules Renouvier. 
2 volumes. Montpellier: Boehm, 1853-1855. Volume 1, Engravers of the 
Fifteenth Century. 

Lives or THE Most Eminent PaInTers, SCULPTORS, AND ARCHITECTS. 
By Giorgio Vasari. Translated by Mrs. Jonathan Foster. With commentary 
by J. P. Richter. 6 volumes. London: George Bell & Sons. 1890-1892. 


Frnicuerra, Maso (1426-1464) 

A FLorenTINE PicTuRE-CHRONICLE; BEING A SERIES OF NINETY-NINE 
Drawincs REPRESENTING SCENES AND PERSONAGES OF ANCIENT History, 
SACRED AND PROFANE; REPRODUCED FROM THE ORIGINALS IN THE BriTIsH 
Museum. Edited by Sidney Colvin. 99 reproductions and 117 text illustra- 
tions. London: B. Quaritch. 1898. 

Sanpro Bortice.ii. By Herbert P. Horne. 43 plates. London: George Bell 
& Sons. 1905. pp. 77-86. 


THE PLanets (c. 1460) 


Tue Seven Pianets. By Friedrich Lippmann. Translated by Florence Sim- 
monds. 43 reproductions. London. 1895. (International Chalcographical 
Society. 1895.) 


Tue Orrto Prints (c. 1465-1470) 


FLORENTINISCHE ZIERSTUCKE AUS DEM XV. JAHRHUNDERT. Edited by Paul 
Kristeller. 25 reproductions. Berlin: Bruno Cassirer. 1909. (Graphische 
Gesellschaft. Publication 10.) 


[92] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


DELLE ‘IMPRESE AMOROSE’ NELLE PIU ANTICHE INCISIONE FIORENTINE By 


A. Warburg. Rivista d’Arte, Vol. 3 (July-August). Florence. 1905. 


ENGRAVINGS IN Books (1477-1481) 


Works or THE ITALIAN ENGRAVERS IN THE FIFTEENTH Century; Repro- 
DUCED ate tad eel os wiTH AN IntRopucTIon. By George William Reid. 20 
reproductions on 1g plates. First Series: I] Libro del Monte Sancto di Dio, 
1477; La Divina Commedia of Dante; and the Triumphs of Petrarch. 


ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE Divina ComMEDIA, FLORENCE, 1481 


Sanpro Borricetu. By Herbert P. Horne. 43 plates. London: George Bell 
& Sons. 1908. pp. 75-77, 190-255. 
ZEICHNUNGEN VON Sanpro Borriceiii zu Dante’s GorrriicHer Komor- 
DIE NACH DEN ORIGINALEN IM K., KuprerstTICHKABINET ZU BERLIN. Edited 
by Friedrich Lippmann. 20 reproductions of engravings bound with text. 
With portfolio of 84 reproductions of the drawings. 

Supplemented by—Die acuT HANDZEICHNUNGEN DES SANDRO Borti- 
CELLI zU Dantes GOrrLicHER Komépiz im VatTiKAn. Edited by Fosef 
Strzygowski. With portfolio of 8 reproductions. 


TRIUMPHS OF PETRARCH (c. 1470-1480) 


PETRARQUE; SES ETUDES D’ART, SON INFLUENCE SUR LES ARTISTES, SES 
PORTRAITS AND CEUX DE LAURE, L’ILLUSTRATION DE SES KerITs. By Victor 
Masséna, Prince d’Essling, and Eugene Muntz. 21 plates and 191 text illus- 
trations. Paris: Gazette des Beaux-Arts. 1902. 

Erupes sur Les TRIOMPHES DE Pérrarque. By Victor Masséna, Prince 
d@’Essling. 6 illustrations. Gazette des Beaux-Arts. 2 parts. Part I. Vol. 35 
(second period). pp. 311-321. Part II. Vol. 36 (second period). pp. 25-34. 
Paris. 1887. 

Perrarcy; His Lire anv Times. By H. C. Hollway-Calthrop. 24 illustrations. 
London: Methuen & Co. 1907. 


BroaD Manner PLateEs (c. 1470-1480) 


Sanpro Borticeti. By Herbert P. Horne. 43 plates. London: George Bell 
& Sons. 1908. pp. 288-291. 


Tue Taroccui Prints (c. 1467) 


Diz TaRroccHI; ZWEI ITALIENISCHE KUPFERSTICHFOLGEN AUS DEM XV. 
Janruunpert. Edited by Paul Kristeller. 100 reproductions on 50 plates. 
Berlin: Bruno Cassirer. 1910. (Graphische Gesellschaft. Extraordinary 
Publication 2.) 


DER VENEZIANISCHE KuprersticH im XV. Janruunvert. By Paul Kris- 
teller. 6 illustrations. Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft fiir vervielfaltigende 
Kunst, Vol. 30, No. 1. Vienna. 1907. 

ORIGINE DES cartes A JouER. By R. Merlin. Abont 600 reproductions. 
Paris: L’auteur. 1869. 


[93] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Tue Taroccut Prints. By Emil H. Richter. 13 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 37-89. Boston. 1916. 
CaTALOGUE OF PLAyiInG AND OTHER Carbs IN THE British Museum. By 


William Hughes Willshire. 78 reproductions on 24 plates. London: The 
Trustees. 1876. 


PoLLAruoLo, ANTONIO (1432-1498) 
FLORENTINE PAINTERS OF THE ReNaIssaNce. By Bernhard Berenson. New 
York: Putnam’s Sons. 1899. pp. 47-57- 


Antonio PotiatuoLo. By Maud Cruttwell. 51 illustrations. London: Duck- 
worth and Company. 1907. 


Nore su Manrecna E Potiatvoio. By Arthur Mayger Hind. 2 illustrations. 
L’Arte, Vol. 9, pp. 303-305- Rome. 1906. 


GERMAN ENGRAVING: THE MASTER OF 
THE AMSTERDAM CABINET AND 
ALBRECHT: DURER 


ITH the exception of Martin Schongauer, 
none of Diirer’s immediate predecessors bet- 
ter repays a thorough study, or exerts a more potent 
fascination, than the MasTer or THE AMSTERDAM 
Castnet. The earlier writers, from Duchesne to 
Dutuit, were united in their opinion that this en- 
graver was a Netherlander; but Max Lehrs, follow- 
ing the track opened up by Harzen, has proved 
conclusively that the Master of the Amsterdam 
Cabinet (so called because the largest collection of 
his engravings—eighty subjects out of the eighty- 
nine which are known—is preserved in the Royal 
Print Rooms in Amsterdam) was not a Nether- 
lander but a South German, a native of Rhenish 
Suabia—the very artist, in fact, who designed the 
illustrations of the Planets and their influences and 
the various arts and occupations of men, for the 
so-called ““Medieval House Book” in the collection 
of Prince von Waldburg-Wolfegg. 
In subject-matter he owes little to his predeces- 
sors, and in technique he is an isolated phenome- 


[95] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


non. St. Martin and the Beggar and St. Michael and 
the Dragon show that he was acquainted with the 
work of Martin Schongauer; the Ecstasy of St. 
Mary Magdalen is obviously based upon a similar 
engraving by the Master E. S. of 1466; but for the 
most part he stands alone. He seems to have 
worked entirely in dry-point upon some soft metal 
—lead or pewter, perhaps—and the-ink which he 
used, of a soft grayish tint, combines with the 
breadth and softness of the lines to impart to his 
prints much of the character of drawings in silver- 
point. 

The Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet has 
treated a wide range of subjects, his preference 
being for scenes of everyday life. His prints show 
appreciation of the beauties of landscape, his skill 
in the treatment of wide spaces is masterly, and 
there is‘a beauty and sweetness in the expression of 
his faces which makes him a worthy rival of 
Martin Schongauer himself. He has left us no 
purely ornamental designs, such as might serve in 
the decoration of vessels used in the church, and 
we may infer, from the character of his engravings, 
that he was a painter, who used the dry-point as 
a diversion, rather than a professional engraver, 
pursuing his craft as a means of livelihood. In 
power of composition he can hardly rank with 
Martin Schongauer, and in range of intellect he 


[96] 


MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET. ECSTASY 
OF ST. MARY MAGDALEN 


Size of the original engraving, 754 x $14 inches 


In the Royal Print Room, Amsterdam 


MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET. CRUCIFIXION 


Size of the original engraving, 6 x 514 inches 


In the Royal Print Room, Amsterdam 


GERMAN: ENGRAVING 


falls short of the heights reached by Albrecht 
Durer; but his very limitations, perhaps, render 
him a more companionable personage, and _ his 
modernity makes an immediate appeal to us all. 

The Eestasy of St. Mary Magdalen is one of his 
earliest plates and is a free translation of the same 
subject by the Master E. S. It would seem as 
though his dry-point was the immediate original 
of Diirer’s woodcut. The position of the Magdalen’s 
hands is the same in both compositions, but Diirer 
has added a landscape which, admirable though it 
be, detracts from the main interest of his print. 

The Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet, in a 
second rendering, herewith reproduced, has elimin- 
ated all superfluous or distracting details and 
imparted a surprising degree of grace and purity 
to the lovely design. Anything like a chrono- 
logical arrangement of the master’s work would 
be difficult, but one may safely assume that this 
beautiful engraving belongs to the latest and most 
mature period of his art, to which period we also 
may assign the Two Lovers. 

As a rule, his least successful engravings are those 
dealing with religious themes. At times, however, 
as in the Crucifixion, he rises to heights of dra- 
matic intensity, and Diirer may be indebted more 
than we realize to this rendering of the divine 
tragedy. Aristotle and Phyllis and Solomon’s Idola- 


[99] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


try are satirical illustrations of the follies of sages 
in love. Both plates are illumined by a truly 
modern sense of humor, while the arrangement of 
the figures within the spaces to be filled is admir- 
able. 

Such subjects as The Three Living and the Three 
Dead Kings and Young Man and Death are varia- 
tions upon a theme which was uppermost in the 
minds of many men at this time, when the rs 
Moriendi and the Dance of Death were constant 
reminders of man’s mortality. In agreeable con- 
trast is the dry-point of Two Lovers—a little mas- 
terpiece—one of his most charming designs. ‘““The 
sweet shyness of the maiden, the tender glances of 
the lover and the soft pressure of their hands are 
rendered with an inimitable grace, and the work 
is altogether of such exceptional quality that we 
may count this delightful picture as one of the 
rarest gems of German engraving in the fifteenth 
century.””* 

The Stag Hunt is filled with the spirit of out- 
door life, the exhilaration of the chase, and the 
joy of the hounds in pursuing their quarry. No 
other engraver of the fifteenth century has left us 
any such truthful rendering of a hunting scene, and 
the life-enhancing quality of this little dry-point 


*The Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet. By Max Lehrs. Inter- 
national Chalcographical Society, 1893 and 1894.  p. 7. 


[100] 


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LNONH OVLS “LHNIGVO NVGYALSNV AHL HO YHLSVN 


MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET. ST. GEORGE 


Size of the original engraving, 55 x 41% inches 
In the British Museum 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


makes even Diirer’s rendering of animal forms 
seem cold and relatively lifeless. 

The master’s knowledge of the anatomy of the 
horse, and his treatment of that noble beast, unfor- 
tunately fall far short of his rendering of the dogs 
and stags in the Stag Hunt. The figure of St. George 
is sufficiently graceful and convincing, but the horse 
(seemingly of the rocking-horse variety) can hardly 
be proclaimed a complete success. In spite of this 
obvious defect it is one of the artist’s finest plates, 
remarkable for its exceptional force and animation. 
The unique proof, of which the British Museum is 
the fortunate possessor, is in splendid condition 
and rich in burr. 

And now, with some trepidation of spirit, we ap- 
proach ALBRECHT Dt&rer and his engraved work. 
His many-sidedness foredooms to failure any at- 
tempt at an adequate and comprehensive treat- 
ment. His compositions, as Max Allihn justly says, 
may fittingly be likened to the Sphinx of the old 
legend; for “they attack everyone who, either as 
critic, historian or harmless wanderer, ventures in 
the realm of art, and propose to him their unsolv- 
able riddles.” 

Of his own work Diirer says: “What beauty may 
be I know not. Art is hidden in nature and whoso- 
ever can tear it out has it,” and his life-long quest 
of knowledge, his truly German reverence for fact, 


[103] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


hangs like a millstone around his neck. “Of a 
truth,” writes Raphael, “this man would have sur- 
passed us all if he had had the masterpieces of art 
constantly before him.’”’ Raphael himself—‘‘Ra- 
phael the Divine” —hardly paralyzed esthetic crit- 
icism for a longer period than has Direr, and in 
studying his engravings, if the student would see 
them for what they are, as works of art, and not 
through the enchanted, oftentimes stupefying, maze 
of metaphysics, he must be prepared for the gibes 
and verbal brick-bats of his contemporaries, who 
hold in reverence all that has the sanction of long- 
continued repetition by authority after authority. 

“Tf you see it in a book it’s true; if you see it in 
applies with only 


’ 


a German book it’s very true,’ 
too telling a force to a considerable share of Durer 
speculation. For better or worse I cannot but think 
that Diirer’s prime intention in his engravings was 
an artistic one, though obviously this intention was 
often over-laid with a desire to supply an existing 
demand and to introduce, into otherwise simple 
compositions, traditional moralistic motives which 
should render his engravings more marketable at 
the fairs, where mostly they were sold. So many 
and so fascinating are the facets of Diirer’s person- 
ality, so interesting is he as a man in whose mind 
meet, and sometimes blend, the ideas of the 
Middle Ages with those almost of our own time, 


[104] 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


that if we are to study, even in the briefest and 
most cursory fashion, his engraved work, we must 
perforce confine ourselves strictly to the artistic 
content of his plates and not be seduced into the 
by-ways of speculation which lead anywhere—or, 
more often, nowhere. 

Earliest of his authenticated engravings, without 
monogram and without date, crude in handling, 
possibly suggested by the work of some earlier 
master, and in all probability executed before his 
first journey to Venice (that is to say, before or in 
the year 1490) is the Ravisher, susceptible of as 
many and as varied interpretations as there are 
authorities; from a man using violence, to the 
struggle for existence. It has even been connected 
in some way with a belief in witchcraft! The Holy 
Family with the Dragonfly, to which Koehler gives 
second place in his chronological arrangement of 
Diirer’s engravings, shows an astonishing advance 
in technique and in composition. It is undated, but 
the monogram is in its early form. The galley and 
the two gondolas, in the distant water to the right, 
would seem to indicate that it was engraved in or 
about the year 1494, upon Durer’s return from 
Venice, and it is probably his first plate after his 
return to Nuremberg. There is a sweetness and an 
attractiveness in the face of the Virgin which points 
to an acquaintance with Schongauer’s engraving, 


[105] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


the Virgin with a Parrot. The poise of the head and 
the flowing hair lend color to this supposition. 

To how great an extent not only the engravings, 
but the theories, of Jacopo de’ Barbari may have 
influenced Diirer in such plates as St. ‘ferome in 
Penitence, the Carrying Off of Amymone, Hercules, 
or the Four Naked Women, is difficult to determine. 
It may have been considerable, though, at times, 
one cannot help wondering whether the theory of 
proportion of the human body, of which Jacopo 
spoke to Durer, but concerning which he refused 
(or was unable) to give him further detailed partic- 
ulars, may not have been more or less of a “bluff,” 
since there is no record of Jacopo having com- 
mitted the results of his studies to writing, and in 
his engravings there is little evidence of any logical 
theory of proportion. That a potent influence was 
at work shaping Direr’s development is clear, and 
the figure of St. Ferome undoubtedly owes a good 
deal to Jacopo. The landscape 1s all Durer’s own, 
the first of a long series finely conceived and admir- 
ably executed. The long, sweeping lines in the fore- 
ground recall the manner of Jacopo de’ Barbari, 
but otherwise the engraving owes little technically 
to that artist. 

The Virgin and Child with the Monkey 1s the most 
brilliant of Diirer’s engravings in his earlier period. 
In the opinion of many students it 1s, likewise, the 


[106] 


ALBRECHT DURER. VIRGIN AND CHILD WITH THE 
MONKEY 


Size of the original engraving, 734 x 434 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ALBRECHT DURER. FOUR NAKED WOMEN 


Size of the original engraving, 734 x 534 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


most beautiful and dignified, not only in the figures 
of the Virgin and Child, but also in the breadth and 
richness of the landscape. The loveliness of the back- 
ground was early recognized, and several Italian 
engravers, including Giulio Campagnola, availed 
themselves of it. When Diirer’s drawings and water- 
colors are more generally known, he will be ac- 
claimed one of the masters of landscape. There is a 
freshness, a breeziness, an ‘‘out-of-doors”’ quality 
in his water-color of the Weierhaus which will sur- 
prise those who hitherto have known him only 
through his engraved work, wherein the landscape 
undergoes a certain formalizing process. 

The Virgin and Child with the Monkey is so 
beautiful in simplicity of handling, so delightful in 
arrangement of black and white, that it is hard to 
reconcile oneself to the comparatively coarse line 
work, the insensitiveness to beauty of form, the 
disregard of anatomy, shown in Four Naked Women 
of 1497—Direr’s first dated plate—especially the 
woman standing to the left, who combines the 
slackness of Jacopo de’ Barbari at his worst with 
the heaviness and puffiness possible only to a 
Northerner unacquainted with the classic ideals 
of the Italian Renaissance. 

Speculation is again rife as to the meaning, if 
it has a meaning, of the skull and bone on the 
ground, and the devil emerging from the flames at 


[109] 


ENGRAVERS AND -ETCHERS 


the left. The engraving seems to be a straight- 
forward, naturalistic study of the nude, with these 
accessories thrown in to give the subject a moral- 
izing air which would make it palatable to the 
artist’s contemporaries. There could hardly be a 
greater contrast to this frankly hideous treatment 
of the human form than Hercules (called also the 
Effects of fealousy, the Great Satyr, etc.). In this 
plate we are able, as in few others—the one notable 
exception being the ddam and Eve of 1504—to 
follow out, step by step, Durer’s upbuilding of the 
composition. The figures are, in this case, idealized 
according to the canons of classical beauty, rather 
than realistically rendered. Incidentally, the land- 
scape is quite the most beautiful which appears in 
any of Diirer’s engravings. Its spaciousness 1n- 
stantly commands our admiration, and the grada- 
tion from light to dark, to indicate differing planes 
in the trees, is managed in a masterly manner. 
Beginning with the Death of Orpheus, engraved 
by some anonymous North Italian master working 
in the Fine Manner of the Tarocchi Cards, the next 
step is Diirer’s pen drawing, dated 1494. The fig- 
ures of Orpheus and of the two Thracian Meenads 
remain unchanged, as does also the little child run- 
ning towards the left. Dtirer has, however, changed 
the lute into a lyre, as being more suited to Or- 
pheus, and has added the beautiful group of trees 


[110] 


ALBRECHT DURER. HERCULES 


Size of the original engraving, 1334 x 834 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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ALBRECHT DURER. DEATH OF ORPHEUS 


Size of the original drawing, 1134 x 874 inches 
In the Kunsthalle, Hamburg 


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GERMAN ENGRAVING 


which reappears, little changed, in his engraving of 
Hercules. There is a drawing of the Mantegna 
School which Diirer may, or may not, have seen; 
but the face of Orpheus in his drawing shows cer- 
tain unmistakable Mantegna characteristics, far 
removed from the North Italian Fine Manner 
print. From Mantegna’s engraving, the Battle of 
the Sea-Gods (right-hand portion), Diirer has bor- 
rowed the figure of the reclining woman to the left 
and the Satyr. That he was acquainted with this 
engraving by Mantegna is attested by a drawing 
of 1494. The man standing to the right, with legs 
spread wide apart, wearing a fantastic helmet in 
the shape of a cock, recalls the work of Pollaiuolo, by 
whom there exists a similar drawing, now in Berlin. 
From these various elements Diirer builds up hiscom- 
position. Its full meaning he alone knew. It has re- 
mained an unsolved riddle from his time to our own. 

The Carrying Off of Amymone belongs to this same 
period. Here Durer has again used the motive 
taken from Mantegna’s engraving, the Battle of the 
Sea Gods; but in this instance he follows his original 
much more closely. Diirer alludes to this print in 
the diary of his journey to the Netherlands as The 
Sea Wonder (Das Meerwunder); and although the 
interpretations given to it are many and various, 
its true meaning, as in the case of the Hercules, 
remains a matter of conjecture. 


[115] 


ENGRAVERS. AND ETCHERS 


By 1503, the year to which belongs the Coat-of- 
Arms with the Skull, and also, in all probability, the 
magnificent Coat-of-drms with the Cock, Durer 
seems to have overcome successfully all technical 
difficulties and is absolute master of his medium. 
From this time onwards, although his manner 
undergoes certain modifications in the direction of 
fuller color and of a more accurate rendering of 
texture, his language is adequate for anything he 
may wish to say, and he is free to address himself 
to the solution of scientific problems, such as are 
involved in the elucidation of his canon of human 
proportion, or the still deeper questions which 
stirred so profoundly the speculative minds of his 
time. 

With the exception of Hercules, ddam and Eve 1s 
the only engraving by Diirer of which trial proofs, 
properly so-called, exist, whereby we can study 
Diirer’s method. First the outlines were lightly 
laid in; then the background was carried forward 
and substantially completed. In the first trial proof 
Adam’s right leg alone is finished; but in the second 
trial proof he is completed to the waist. This 
method of procedure is significant, in view of the 
endless controversies, based upon an incomplete | 
study of Direr’s technique, regarding the use of 
preliminary etching in many plates of his middle 
and later period. 


[116] 


ALBRECHT DURER. ADAM AND EVE 
Size of the original engraving, 934 x 854 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ALBRECHT DURER. APOLLO AND DIANA 


Size of the original engraving, 414 x 234 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


In Adam and Eve Diirer has summed up the 
knowledge obtained by actual observation and by 
a series of drawings and studies extending over a 
number of years, and combined with it his theo- 
retical working out of the proportions of the human 
figure, male and female. In no other plate has he 
lavished such loving care upon the representation 
of the human form. The flesh is, so to speak, 
caressed with the burin, as though, once and for all, 
the artist wished to prove to his contemporaries 
that the graver sufficed for the rendering of the 
most beautiful, the most subtle and _ scientific 
problems. That Ditirer himself was satisfied with 
the result of his labors at this time is made mani- 
fest by the detailed inscription, ALBERTUS DURER 
NORICUS FACIEBAT, on the tablet, followed by his 
monogram and the date 1504. This plate pro- 
claimed him indisputably the greatest master of the 
burin of his time; and along the lines which he laid 
down for himself it remains unsurpassed until our 
own day. 

Adam and Eve is followed by a group of prints 
which, though interesting in treatment and charm- 
ing in subject, such as the Nativity, Apollo and 
Diana, and the first four plates of the Small Passion, 
reveal nothing new in Diirer’s development as an 
artist ora man. In the year 1510, however, is made 
his first experiment in dry-point Of the very small 


[119] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


plate of St. Veronica with the Sudarium two impres- 
sions only have come down to us, neither of them 
showing much burr. The Man of Sorrows, dated 
1512, likewise must have been very delicately 
scratched upon the copper, all existing impres- 
sions being pale and delicate in tone. Whether 
Diurer’s desire was to produce engravings which 
should entail less labor and be more quickly 
executed than was possible by the slower and more 
laborious method of the burin, or whether, as seems 
much more likely, he was influenced by an ac- 
quaintanceship with the dry-point work of the 
Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet, cannot be as- 
serted with any degree of assurance. Diurer’s third 
dry-point, the St. Ferome by the Willow Tree (like 
the Man of Sorrows dated 1512), is treated in so 
much bolder and more painter-like a manner, is 
so rich in burr and so satisfying as a composition, 
that one can hardly account for such remarkable 
development unaided by any outside influence or 
stimulation. The British Museum’s impression of 
the first state, before the monogram,—the richest 
impression known—yields nothing in color effect 
even to Rembrandt. Thausing 1s inclined to think 
that Rembrandt must have been inspired by this 
plate to himself take up the dry-point—an inter- 
esting speculation and one which would do honor 
to both of these great masters. 


fre] 


ALBRECHT DURER. ST. JEROME BY THE WILLOW TREE 
(First State) 


Size of the original dry-point 82% x 7 inches 
In the British Museum 


ALBRECHT DURER. HOLY FAMILY 
Size of the original dry-point, 814 x 714 inches 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


The Holy Family, though without monogram and 
undated, belongs so unmistakably, from internal 
evidence, to this period, that we may safely assign 
it to the year 1512. The background and landscape 
to the left are indicated in outline only. Did Diirer 
intend to carry the plate further? We can never 
know. It is his fourth and, unfortunately, his last 
dry-point. There is a beauty in St. Ferome by the 
Willow Tree and in this Holy Family which leads 
us to read in these two masterpieces certain Italian 
influences. There is the largeness of conception of 
the Venetian School, and both Sz. Ferome and 
St. Foseph show strong traces of such a master as 
Giovanni Bellini. 

With the brief space at our disposal, what shall 
we say of the crowning works of those two wonderful 
years, 1513-1514—Knight, Death and the Devil, 
Melancholia, and St. Ferome in his Study? Are they 
three of a proposed series of the four temperaments? 
Should they be considered as parts of a group—or 
is each masterpiece complete in itself? One thing 
at least they have in common: they are truly 
“Stimmungsbilder’’—that is, the lighting is so ar- 
ranged, in each composition, as directly to affect 
the mind and the mood of the beholder, and ‘“‘the 
sombre gloom of the Knight, Death and the Devil, 
the weird, unearthly glitter of the Melancholia, 
with its uncertain, glinting lights, the soft, tranquil 


[123] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


sunshine of the St. Ferome, are all in accordance 
with their several subjects. These, whether or not 
originally intended to represent ‘classes of men’ or 
‘moods,’ certainly call up the latter in the mind of 
the beholder—the steady courage of the valiant 
fighter for the right, undismayed by darkness and 
dangers; the brooding, leading well-nigh to despair, 
over the vain efforts of human science to lift the 
veil of the eternal secret; and the calm content of the 
mind at peace with itself and the world around it.”* 

Diirer, unfortunately, sheds no light upon the 
inner and deeper meaning of the Kuzight, Death and 
the Devil. He speaks of it simply as ““A Horseman.” 
The many and various titles invented for it since 
his time carry us very little further forward than 
where we began. The letter S, which precedes the 
date, the dog which trots upon the further side of 
the horse, even the blades of grass under the hoof 
of the right hind leg of the horse, have all been 
matters of speculation and controversy, and we 
choose the part of wisdom if, disregarding the 
swirling currents of metaphysical interpretation, 
we enjoy this masterpiece of engraving for its 
esthetic content primarily, and for its potential 
meanings afterwards. 


* A Chronological Catalogue of the Engravings, Dry-Points and Etch- 
ings of Albert Durer, as exhibited at the Grolier Club. By Sylvester 
R. Koehler. New York; The Grolier Club. 1897. p. 65. 


[124] 


ALBRECHT DURER. KNIGHT, DEATH AND THE DEVIL 


Size of the original engraving, 954 x 734 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


REmcaae Dinenanaieenatiaaiicketoe 
TARE Bio Slice titaA Ss 


ALBRECHT DURER. MELANCHOLIA 


Size of the original engraving, 934 x 714 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


Melancholia favors an even wider range of specu- 
lation than the Knight, Death and the Devil. This 
woman, who wears a laurel wreath and who, seated 
in gloomy meditation, supports her cheek in her 
left hand, while all the materials for human labor, 
for art, and for science lie scattered about her—does 
she symbolize human Reason in despair at the 
limits imposed upon her power? Or does the plate 
~have a more personal and intimate meaning, re- 
flecting Durer’s deep grief at the death of his 
mother—the mother to whom he so often refers in 
his letters, always with heartfelt affection? 

The so-called “magic square” lends color to the 
latter interpretation. Diirer’s mother died on May 
17, 114. The figures in the diagonally opposite 
corners of the square can be read as follows, 16 + 
I and 13+ 4,.making.17, the day of the month; 
as do the figures in the center read crosswise; 10 - 
+ 7 and 11 + 6, and also the middle figures at 
the sides read across, 5 + 12 and 8 + g. The two 
middle figures in the top line, 3 + 2, give 5, the 
month in question, and the two middle figures in 
the bottom line give the year, 1514. 

Artistically the plate suffers from the multiplicity 
of objects introduced, and the loving care which 
Durer has lavished upon them. He has wished to 
tell his story—whatever it may be—with absolute 
completeness in every particular, and in so doing 


[127] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


he has weakened and confused the effect of his 
plate. It were idle to speculate upon what might 
have happened had so sensitive a master as Martin 
Schongauer possessed adequate technical skill for 
the interpretation of such a subject. What a mas- 
terpiece of masterpieces might have resulted if he 
had subjected it to that process of simplification 
and elimination of which he was so splendid an 
exponent! However this may be, Melancholia has 
been, and probably will continue to be, one of the 
signal triumphs in the history of engraving. We 
may never solve the riddles which she propounds; 
but is she less fascinating for being only partially 
understood? 

St. Ferome in his Cell, all things considered, may 
be accounted Diirer’s high-water mark. There is a 
unity and harmony about this plate which 1s lack- 
ing in Melancholia. Nothing could be finer than the 
lighting; and, judged merely as a “picture,” it is 
altogether satisfying from every point of view. 
The accessories, even the animals in the foreground, 
take their just places in the composition. It 1s 
surprising that, although the plate is “finished” 
with minute and loving care, there is not the faint- 
est evidence of labor apparent anywhere about it; 
but this is only one of its many and superlative 
merits. The light streaming in through the window 
at the left and bathing in its soft effulgence the 


[128] 


:| 
i' 
a | 

BE 
a4 
‘ 


j 


ALBRECHT DURER. ST. JEROME IN HIS CELL 


Size of the original engraving, 94 x 7% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ALBRECHT DURER. . VIRGIN SEATED BESIDE A WALL 


Size of the original engraving, 534 x 37% inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


Saint, intent upon his task, and the entire room in 
which he sits, has been for centuries the admiration 
of every art lover. 

To this year, 1514, also belongs the Virgin 
Seated Beside a Wall, a plate in which the variety 
of texture has been carried further than in any 
other engraving by Diirer. The flesh is simply 
treated, in line for the most part; but the under- 
garment, the fur-trimmed wrapper, and the scarf 
which covers the head of the Virgin, hanging down 
the back and thrown over the knee, are all care- 
fully differentiated. Again, the various planes in 
the landscape leading up to the fortified city are 
beautifully handled, as is also the wall to the right. 
It is hard to say what technical problems remained 
for Diirer to solve after such a little masterpiece as 
this. 

His growing fame meanwhile had attracted the 
attention of the Emperor Maximilian, “the last of 
the Knights,” who in February, 1512, visited 
Nuremberg. Diirer is commissioned to design the 
Triumphal Arch, the Triumphal Car, and similar 
monumental records of the Emperor’s prowess; not 
to speak of such orders as the decoration of the 
Emperor’s Prayer-Book, etc. Such distraction ab- 
sorbed the greater part of the artist’s time and 
energies, and there was left little opportunity for 
the development of his work along the lines he had 


[131] 


ENGRAVERS AND. ETCHERS 


hitherto followed. It may be that we owe to this 
fact, and to the quick mode of producing a print 
such a process offers, the six etchings on iron which 
bear dates from 1515 to 1518. But, whatever the 
reason, we are glad that he etched these plates. 
Discarding, for the moment, the elaborate and de- 
tailed method of line work of his engravings on 
copper, he adopts a more open system, such as 
would “come well” in the biting—closer work than 
in his woodcuts, but perfectly adapted to that 
which he wished to say. 

There is a tense and passionate quality in Christ 
in the Garden which places this etched plate 
among the noteworthy works even of Durer, 
while the wind-torn tree to the left of Christ gives 
the needed touch of the supernatural to the com- 
position. The Carrying Off of Proserpine—the spir- 
ited drawing for which is now in the J. Pierpont 
Morgan collection—is the working out, with alle- 
gorical accessories, of a study of a warrior carrying 
off a woman. The last of his plates, the Cannon, 
of 1518, with its charming landscape, was doubtless 
executed to supply, promptly, a popular demand. 
It represents a large fie!d piece bearing the Arms of 
Nuremberg, and the five strangely costumed men 
to the right, gazing upon the “Nuremberg Field 
Serpent,” obviously have some relation to the fear 
of the Turk, then strong in Germany. 


[132] 


CHRIST IN THE GARDEN 


ALBRECHT DURER 


inches 


34x 6% i 


8 


In the Museum of Fine Arts 


Size of the original etching, 


Boston 


5) 


| IMAGO: ERASMLROTERODA 
ML: AB‘ ALBERTO * DVRERO-AD 
I VIVAM: EFFIGIEM: DELINIATA 


| THN: KPEITTQ-TA-2YPTPAM 
MATA: MISE! 


Gia Aa £9 aD ScD Cf 


ALBRECHT DURER. ERASMUS OF ROTTERDAM 


Size of the original engraving, 974 x 754 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


GERMAN ENGRAVING 


In 1519 we have the first of Durer’s engraved 
portraits—/bert of Brandenburg, “The Little Cardi- 
nal,” to distinguish it from the larger plate of 1523. 
Opinions as to Durer’s importance as a portrait 
engraver vary considerably. Some students feel 
that in these later works the engraver has become 
so engrossed in the delight of his craft that he has 
failed to concentrate his attention upon the counte- 
nance and character of the sitter, bestowing ex- 
cessive care upon the accessories and the minor 
accidents of surface textures—wrinkles and similar 
unimportant matters. On the other hand, such an 
authority as Koehler maintains that the //bert of 
Brandenburg, préeminent for delicacy and noble 
simplicity among these portrait engravings by 
Durer, “will always be ranked among the best 
portraits engraved anywhere and at any time.” 

Frederic the Wise, Elector of Saxony, was one 
of the earliest patrons of Diirer, founder of the 
University of Wittenberg and a supporter of the 
Reformation, although he never openly embraced 
the doctrines of Martin Luther. Durer’s drawing 
in silver-point gives a straightforward and charac- 
terful presentation of the man, and, in this instance, 
translation into the terms of engraving has nowise 
lessened the directness of appeal. 

Erasmus of Rotterdam bears the latest date (1526) 
which we find upon any engraving by Diirer, and it 


[135] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


well may be his last plate. Here the elaboration 
and finish bestowed upon the accessories certainly 
detract from the portrait interest. Erasmus was 
polite enough, when he saw this engraving, to ex- 
cuse its unlikeness to himself by remarking that 
doubtless he had changed much during the five 
years which had intervened between Diurer’s 
drawing of 1521 and the completion of the plate. 
Technically, however, it is a masterpiece, a worthy 
close to the career of undoubtedly the greatest 
engraver Germany has produced. 


GERMAN ENGRAVING: THE MASTER OF THE AM- 
STERDAM CABINET AND ALBRECHT DURER 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


MASTER OF THE AMSTERDAM CABINET (flourished c. 1467- 
c. 1500) 

Zur ZEITBESTIMMUNG DER STICHE DES HausspucH-MetsTers. By Curt 
Glaser. Monatshefte fir Kunstwissenschaft, Vol. 3, pp. 145-156. Leipzig. 
IgIo. 

Tue Master or THE AMSTERDAM Casinet. By Max Lehrs. 89 reproduc- 
tions. London. 1894. (International Chalcographical Society. 1893 and 
1894.) 

BitpER UND ZEICHNUNGEN voM MetsTErR DEs Haussucus. By Max Lehrs. 
5 illustrations. Jahrbuch der k6niglichen preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 
Vol. 20, pp. 173-182. Berlin. 1899. 

Tue Master or THE AMSTERDAM CaBiINET AND Two New Works By His 
Hanp. By Willy F. Storck. 6 illustrations. The Burlington Magazine. 
Vol. 18, pp. 184-192. London. Igo. 


Direr, ALBRECHT (1471-1528) 

Le Pernrre-Graveur. By Adam Bartsch. “Volume 7, pp. 5-197. Albert 
Durer, Vienna. 1803-1821. 

Lirerary Remains or AtBrecut Durer. By William Martin Conway. 14 
illustrations. Cambridge: University Press. 1889. 


Tue Encravincs or ALBrecut Direr. By Lionel Cust. 4 reproductions 
and 25 text illustrations. London: Seeley & Co. 1906. (The Portfolio Ar- 
tistic Monographs. No. 11.) 


AuBREcHT Dtrer; His Encravincs anp Woopcuts. Fdited by Arthur 
Mayger Hind. 65 reproductions. London and New York: Frederick A. 
Stokes Company. n. d. (Great Engravers.) 


Direr. By H. Knackfuss. Translated by Campbell Dodgson. 134 illustra- 
tions. Bielefeld and Leipzig: Velhagen & Klasing. 1900. (Monographs on 
Artists.) 


ExurBition or ALBERT Direr’s Encravines, Ercuincs AnD Dry-Pornts, 
AND oF Most or THE Woopcuts Execurep rrom His Desicns. (Museum 
of Fine Arts, Boston. November 15, 1888—January 15,1889.) By Sylvester R. 
Koehler. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts. 1888. 


CHRONOLOGICAL CATALOGUE OF THE ENGRAVINGS, Dry-Points anp Ercu- 
InGs OF ALBERT Direr, As ExuiBireED AT THE GRoLieR Crus. By Sylvester 


R. Koehler. 9 reproductions on 7 plates. New York: The Grolier Club. 1897, 


Direr; pes MEIsTers GEMALDE, KuUPFERSTICHE UND Ho zscunitte. Edited 
by Valentin Scherer. 473 reproductions. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Deutsche 
Verlags-Anstalt. (Klassiker der Kunst. Vol. 4.) 


[137] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


AuBert Durer; His Lire anp Works. By William B. Scott. Illustrated. 
London: Longmans, Green & Co. 186g. 

ALBRECHT Dtrer; KuprersTiCHE IN GETREUEN NACHBILDUNGEN. Edited 
by Faro Springer. 70 plates. Munich: Holbein-Verlag. 1914. 

AuBert Ditrer; His Lire ann Works. By Moritz Thausing. Translated 
from the German. Edited by Frederick A. Eaton. 2 volumes. 58 illustrations. 
London: John Murray. 1882. 

Direr Society. [Porrro.tios] Wirn Inrropucrory Notes py CAMPBELL 
Dopcson AnD OTHERS. Series I-10 (1898-1908). 311 reproductions. Index 
of Series 1-10. London. 1898-1908. 
———. Publication No. 12. 24 reproductions. London. Ig11. 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING: MANTEGNA TO 
MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI 


NDREA Manrecna ts, both by his art and his 
A influence, the most significant figure in early 
Italian engraving. His method or viewpoint is a 
determining feature in much of the best work 
which was produced during the last quarter of the 
fifteenth century, until the influence of Raphael, 
transmitted through Marcantonio, with a technical 
mode based upon the manner of Albrecht Direr, 
completely changed the current of Italian engray- 
ing, seducing it from what might have developed 
into an original creative art, and condemned it to 
perpetual servitude as the handmaid of painting. 

Andrea Mantegna, born in 1431, at Vicenza, and 
consequently Pollaiuolo’s senior by one year, was 
adopted, at the age of ten, by Squarcione, in Padua. 
Squarcione appears to have been less a painter 
than a contractor, undertaking commissions to be 
executed by artists in his employ. He was likewise 
a dealer in antiquities, and in his shop the young 
Mantegna must have met many of the leading 
humanists who had made Padua famous as a seat 
of classical learning. From them he drew in and 


[139] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


absorbed that passion for imperial Rome which 
was to color his life and his art. His dream was of 
forms more beautiful than those of everyday life, 
built of some substance finer and less perishable 
than the flesh of frail humanity; and as years went 
by his work takes on, 1n increasing measure, a 
grander and more majestic aspect. Fortunate for 
us is it that in his mature period, when his style 
was fully formed, he himself was impelled, by in- 
fluences of which later we shall speak, to take up 
the graving tool and with it produce the seven im- 
perishable masterpieces which, beyond peradven- 
ture, we may claim as his authentic work. 

The Virgin and Child, the earliest of his en- 
gravings, can hardly have been executed before 
1475, and maybe not until after 1480, when Man- 
tegna had reached his fiftieth year. Mr. Hind 
points out that there is a simplicity and directness 
about it which recalls quite early work, similarly 
conceived, such as the Adoration of the Kings of 
1454; but the reasons which he advances are of 
equal weight in assigning it to a later date, and I 
am convinced that the intensity of mother-love ex- 
pressed in the poise and face of the Virgin betokens 
a deeper feeling, a broader humanity, than one 
normally would expect in a youth of twenty-three, 
even though he be illumined with that flame of 
genius which burned so brightly in Mantegna. 


[140] 


\ \\\\ 


AS 
AW 


\ 


NY 


\\ NY 


ANDREA MANTEGNA. VIRGIN AND CHILD 


inches 


% 


x 8 


In the British Museum 


34 


9 


graving, 


Size of the original en 


uo sod ‘SIV ouly fo winosn Ay 9y4 uy 


‘sayout Lr x 8411 ‘BurAvASUD [VUIBIIO dYI JO 9ZIg 


SGOO-WHS HHL 1O AILLVa “VNOULNVAN VAHYOUNV 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


Technically, the plate plainly shows the hand of 
an engraver not yet master of his medium. It is 
marked with all the characteristics which we asso- 
ciate with Mantegna’s work: the strong outline, 
ploughed with repeated strokes of a rather blunt 
instrument into a plate of unbeaten copper or some 
yet softer metal; the diagonal shade lines widely 
spaced; and the light strokes blending all into a 
harmonious whole. In an impression of the first 
state, in the British Museum, there is a tone, simi- 
lar to sulphur-tint, over portions of the plate, 
noticeably in the faces of the mother and child. 
How it was produced is still a matter of conjecture, 
but that it adds much to the beauty of the print is 
beyond question. 

The Bacchanalian Group with Silenus and the 
Bacchanalian Group with a Wine-Press (which, 
like the Battle of the Sea-Gods, may be joined to- 
gether so as to form one long, horizontal composi- 
tion) show greater skill on the part of the engraver. 
Mantegna’s increasing passion for the antique is 
reflected in the standing figure to the left, who with 
his left hand reaches up towards the wreath with 
which he is about to be crowned, while resting his 
right hand upon a horn of plenty. This figure is 
obviously inspired by the Apollo Belvedere, while 
the standing faun, at the extreme right, filled with 
the sheer delight of mere animal existence, is a 


[143] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


delightful creation in Mantegna’s happiest mood. 

The two plates of the Battle of the Sea-Gods may 
be assigned, on technical grounds, to about the same 
period as the two Bacchanals. The drawing which 
Durer made of the right-hand portion, as also of the 
Bacchanalian Group with Silenus, both dated 1494, 
conclusively prove that these engravings antedate 
the completion of the Triumph of Cesar. Though 
Mantegna borrowed his material from the antique, 
he has so shaped it to his ends, so stamped upon it 
the impress of his own personality, as to make of it 
not an echo of classic art, but an original creation 
of compelling force and charm. ““These are not the 
mighty gods of Olympus but the inferior deities of 
Nature, of the Earth and the Sea, who acknowl- 
edge none of the higher obligations and who dis- 
play unchecked their wanton elemental nature, 
giving a loose rein to all the exuberance of their 
joy tm living-:4-"2 <> = Phiese cheatirestaf theses 
frolic about in the water, turbulent and wanton as. 
the waves. ... . Thecombat with those harm- 
less-looking weapons is probably not meant to be 
in earnest; a vent for their superfluous energy 1s 
all they seek.’’* 

To a somewhat later period belongs the Extomé- 
ment. There is nothing of the meek spirit of the 


*Andrea Mantegna. By Paul Kristeller. London; Longman’s Green 
SciComs 19a spe gone 


[144] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


Redeemer in this passionate plate. The hard, lap- 
idary landscape is in accord with the figures, which 
might, not unfittingly, find a place upon some tri- 
umphal arch. Three crosses crown the distant hill. 
At the right stands St. John, a magnificent figure, 
giving utterance to his unspeakable grief, while the 
Virgin, sinking in a swoon, is supported by one of 
the holy women. 

Here is none of that tenderness which we asso- 
ciate with the divine tragedy, none of that grace 
and beauty which inheres in the work of many of 
the Italian painters of the Renaissance. All is stark 
and harsh. It is not food for babes, but it is superb. 

The Risen Christ Between Saints Andrew and 
Longinus 1s Mantegna’s last engraving. Christ 
towers above the two subsidiary figures, with a 
form and bearing which would better befit a Roman 
Emperor returning in triumph. In this plate, above 
all others, Mantegna’s technique shines forth as 
not only adequate, but as beyond question the 
best—perhaps the only one—to convey his mes- 
sage. Translated into another mode, one feels 
that it would lose much of its appeal. It has been 
suggested that the engraving was made as a project 
for a group of statuary—perhaps for the high altar | 
of S. Andrea, in Mantua, raised above the most 
precious relic possessed by the city, the Blood of 
Christ, brought to Mantua by Longinus—a suppo- 


[145] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


sition borne out by the statuesque impressiveness 
of the group and by the fact that Christ gazes 
downwards, as though from a height. 

Although 1480 is the earliest date to which we 
can assign the first of Mantegna’s original engrav- 
ings, there were in existence, at least five years 
before that time, engravings by other hands after 
designs by the master, and it may have been either 
to protect himself from unauthorized and fraudu- 
lent copyists, or as an artistic protest against the 
incapacity of his translators, that Mantegna was 
compelled to take up the graver. There has come 
down to us a letter, dated September 15, 1475, ad- 
dressed by Simone di Ardizone, of Reggio, to the 
Marquis Lodovico, of Mantua, complaining to the 
prince of Mantegna’s behavior towards him. His 
story was that “Mantegna, upon his arrival in 
Mantua, made him splendid offers, and treated 
him with great friendliness. Actuated by feelings 
of compassion, however, towards his old friend, 
Zoan Andrea, a painter in Mantua, from whom 
prints (stampe), drawings, and medals had been 
stolen, and wishing to help in the restoration of the 
plates, he had worked with his friend for four 
months. As soon as this came to Mantegna’s knowl- 
edge he proceeded to threats, and one evening 
Ardizoneand Zoan Andrea had been assaulted by ten 
or more armed men and left for dead in the square.” 


[146] 


ANDREA MANTEGNA. THE RISEN CHRIST BETWEEN 
SAINTS ANDREW AND LONGINUS 


Size of the original engraving, 1514 x 1234 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


He 


Pei ay 


A 


A. ADORATION OF THE MAGI 


NDREA MANTEGN 


SCHOOL OF A 


lg x 1034 inches 


us) 
Arts, 


ginal engraving, 


In the Museum of Fine 


Size of the ori 


Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


The letter is “proof that, in Mantua, in the year 
1475, two professional engravers, one of whom 
clearly designates himself as such, were at work. 

It is clear that Mantegna had a very spe- 
cial interest in the engravings and drawings which 
had been stolen from Zoan Andrea, and which 
Ardizone, ‘out of compassion,’ helped to restore, 
since he sought by force to impede the engraver’s 
work. His anger can also be explained by the sup- 
position that Zoan Andrea’s engravings were fac- 
similes of his own drawings which the former had 
succeeded in obtaining possession of and had used 
as designs for his engravings; and that being un- 
able to win Ardizone’s assistance in his work 
Mantegna thought himself obliged to protest, by 
violent means, against this infringement of his 
artistic rights.”’* 

It is probable that to this drastic and effectual 
method of protecting against piracy his own artistic 
property we owe the two renderings, both incom- 
plete, of the Triumph of Cesar. One may well be 
the series upon which Zoan Andrea and Ardizone 
were working when Mantegna brought their labors 
to an untimely close; whereas the second series, 
although authorized by Mantegna himself, may 


have seemed to him, not without just cause, so to 


* Andrea Mantegna. By Paul Kristeller. London. 1go1. pp. 381-384. 


[149] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


misinterpret his original drawings as to impel him 
to abandon the project and, in future, engrave his 
own designs. The Triumph series naturally re- 
mained incomplete, since, like every great artist, 
Mantegna would hardly feel disposed to repeat, in 
another medium, a subject which he had already 
treated. Of the Triumph plates, the Elephants ap- 
proximates most closely Mantegna’s undoubted 
work; but the drawing lacks distinction, and there 
is a feeling of “tightness” throughout the whole 
plate, which makes it impossible to attribute the 
engraving to Mantegna’s own hand. The plate 
which immediately follows—Soldiers Carrying Tro- 
phies—was left unfinished. The subject is repeated 
in the reverse sense and with the addition of a pilas- 
ter to the right. This pilaster 1s probably Man- 
tegna’s original design for the upright members 
dividing the nine portions of the painted Triumphs, 
since the procession is supposed to pass upon the 
further side of a row of columns, the figures and 
animals being so arranged as to extend over one 
picture to the next, with a sufficient space between 
them for the introduction of the pilaster. 

The Adoration of the Magi, which for some reason 
likewise remained unfinished, is taken directly from 
the central portion of the triptych in the Uffizi. 
The engraving, aside from its intrinsic beauty, is 
of especial interest as affording an example of the 


[150] 


uojJsSog ‘sy oulyy jo uinasnyAy ey uy 


sayoul fr x 87g ‘Suravasue [vursisio ay Jo azIg 


ONIONVG NYWOM 80d “@) VAHANV NVOZ 


GIOVANNI ANTONIO DA BRESCIA. HOLY FAMILY WITH 
SAINTS ELIZABETH AND JOHN 


Size of original engraving, 117% x 10% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


method adopted by Mantegna and his School. The 
structural lines are deeply incised, in many cases by 
repeated strokes of the graver. The diagonal shad- 
ing is then added and the plate carried forward and 
completed, bit by bit. This engraving, at one time 
accounted an original work by the master himself, 
has received of recent years more than its merited 
share of harsh criticism. It obviously falls far 
short, in beauty, of Mantegna’s painting; but, for 
all that, it preserves many of the essential qualities 
of its immediate original, and one cannot but ad- 
mire the manner in which an engraver, certainly 
not of the first rank, has captured the spirit of 
humility and adoration, eloquent in every line of 
the king at the left, humbly bending to receive the 
benediction of the Christ Child. 

By an engraver of the Mantegna School, perhaps 
ZOAN ANDREA, working in Mantegna’s manner and 
after his design for the Parnassus in the Louvre, is 
Four Women Dancing—one of the most charming 
and graceful prints of the period. It differs in many 
particulars from the painting (assigned to the year 
1497) and almost certainly translates Mantegna’s 
drawing, rather than the painting itself. 

To Giovanni Antonio Da Brescia, of whose life, 
apart from what we may learn from a study of his 
work, we know substantially nothing, may be at- 


tributed the Holy Family with Saints Elizabeth and 
[153] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


John, based upon a design by Mantegna, of about 
1500, and probably engraved at a date prior to 
Mantegna’s death, September 13, 1506. At a later 
period, Giovanni came under the influence of 
Marcantonio Raimondi, whose style he imperfectly 
assimilated. 

In the British Museum there is a unique im- 
pression of a Profile Bust of a Young Woman, which 
has been ascribed, with some show of reason, to 
Leonarpbo pA Vinci. Its intrinsic beauty might 
lend some color to this attribution, were it not that, 
even in its reworked condition, the texture and flow 
of the young woman’s abundant tresses, the treat- 
ment of the flowing ribbons, and the delicate shad- 
ing in the face and upon the garment, betray the 
hand of the trained engraver. 

Nico.tetro Rosex pa Mopena was working from 
about 1490 to 1515. He engraved almost a hundred 
plates, the majority of them being presumably 
from his own designs, though in the Adoration of 
the Shepherds the influence of Schongauer is mark- 
edly apparent, and in Fortune and St. Sebastian the 
inspiration of Mantegna is clearly to be seen. 

The group of trees in the Fate of the Evil Tongue 
is borrowed from Durer’s print of Hercules, while 
the Turkish Family and the Four Naked Women— 
the last-named being dated 1500—are copies of 
Duirer’s engravings. Vedriani, writing of Nicoletto 


[154] 


SCHOOL OF LEONARDO DA VINCI. PROFILE BUST OF A 
YOUNG WOMAN 


Size of the original engraving, 414 x 3 inches 
In the British Museum 


NICOLETTO ROSEX DA MODENA. ORPHEUS 


Size of the original engraving, 974 x 634 inches 
In the British Museum 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


as a painter, speaks of him as “‘chiefly distinguished 
in perspective,” and among the most charming of 
his plates in which this quality is seen is Orpheus. 
The bare tree is suggestive of Martin Schongauer, 
while the birds and beasts, including a dog, a pea- 
cock, a weasel, a monkey playing with a tortoise, 
a squirrel, a snake, a piping bird, two rabbits, a 
fox, and a stag, not to speak of the ducks and 
swans in the water, though not copied from north- 
ern originals, have all the charm and lifelike quality 
which we find in the work of German engravers 
such as The Master of St. John the Baptist and 
The Master E. S. of 1466. 

Concerning Jacopo De’ Barpart there is a wealth 
of biographical material, in contrast with the mea- 
gerness of our knowledge concerning the earlier 
Italian engravers. Born at Venice, between 1440 
and 1450, he is known to have worked between 
1500 and 1508 for the Emperor and various other 
princes in different towns of Germany. He was at 
Nuremberg in 1505, and in 1510 he was in the 
service of the Archduchess Margaret, Regent of the 
Netherlands, while, in the inventory of the Regent’s 
pictures of 1515-1516, he is referred to as dead. 

Not one of the thirty engravings by Jacopo is 
signed with his name, initials, or any form of mono- 
gram, nor does any of them bear a date. His em- 
blem is the caduceus, which appears on the greater 


[157] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


number of his prints; and those upon which it is 
lacking can readily be identified by his individual 
style. This style undergoes certain modifications 
with the passing years. In the early period, the 
shading, for the most part, is in parallel lines, which 
follow the contour of the figure, the figure itself 
being long and sinuous. In his middle and later 
period he indulged more freely in cross-hatching, 
and the faces are modelled with greater delicacy. 

Stress has been laid upon the influence exerted 
by Jacopo upon Diirer’s engraving; but with the 
exception of the 4pollo and Diana this influence 1s 
theoretical rather than artistic. Durer, in one of 
the manuscript sketches, dated 1523, for his book 
The Theory of Human Proportions, writes: “How- 
beit, I can find none such who hath written aught 
about how to form a canon of human proportion, 
save one man—Jacopo by name, born at Venice, 
and a charming painter. He showed me the figures 
of a man and a woman, which he had drawn ac- 
cording to a canon of proportions, so that, at that 
time, I would rather have seen what he meant than 
be shown a new kingdom. . . . Then, how- 
ever, I was still young and had not heard of such 
things before. Howbeit, I was very fond of art, so 
I set myself to discover how such a canon might be 
wrought out.” Durer undoubtedly refers to the 
period of his first visit to Venice, and it is, accord- 


[158] 


JACOPO DE’ BARBARI. APOLLO AND DIANA 


Size of the original engraving, 534 x 37% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


oe Aes 


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F 
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JACOPO DE’ BARBARI. ST. CATHERINE 


Size of the original engraving, 7% x 454 inches 
In the British Museum 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


ingly, in Diirer’s earliest plates that we see most 
clearly the influence of the older master on his 
technical method. Direr soon outstripped Jacopo 
in everything that pertains to the technical side of 
engraving and worked out for himself a method 
which, for his purpose, was substantially perfect. 
In such plates as Fudith and St. Catherine, Ja- 
copo’s love for long, flowing lines finds its fullest 
expression. There is a grace about these single 
figures which is not without appealing ‘charm, 
though obviously they leave something to be de- 
sired on the score of solidity and structure. 
GrroLtamo Mocerro, born in Murano before 
1458, was living at Venice in 1514, where he died 
after 1531. According to Vasari, Mocetto was, at 
some time, an assistant to Giovanni Bellini, whose 
influence may be traced in his work. His engravings 
are unpleasing in style and often clumsy in draughts- 
manship. He owes such merit as he may possess 
to the originals which he interpreted. There is a 
compelling power in ‘Fudith, after Mantegna’s de- 
sign, which atones for even so shapeless a member 
as Judith’s right hand. The grandeur of the plate 
is, however, derived from Mantegna. Mocetto has 
done little more than traduce it; but, even so, the 
engraving 1s noteworthy, inasmuch as it preserves 
for us a noble composition, of which otherwise we 
might remain in ignorance. The Baptism of Christ 


[161] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


is adapted, with some modifications, from Giovanni 
Bellini’s painting executed between 1§00 and I5STo. 
In the engraving, the landscape, which differs radi- 
cally from that in Bellini’s painting, may possibly 
be original with Mocetto, though it recalls the work 
of Cima, whose Baptism, in S. Giovanni in Bragora, 
Venice, was painted in 1494. 

Benepetro Monracna was, like Mocetto, 
painter as well as engraver. His earliest engravings 
are executed in a large, open manner, which can be 
seen to advantage in the Sacrifice of Abraham. The 
outline is strongly defined and the shading chiefly 
in parallel lines. Where cross-hatching 1s used, it is 
laid generally at right angles. Later, Montagna 
modifies his style and adopts the finer system of 
cross-hatching perfected by Durer, whose influ- 
ence, especially in the backgrounds, is clearly to be 
traced, and whose Nativity, of the year 1504, Mon- 
tagna copied in reverse. St. Ferome Beneath an 
Arch of Rock belongs to this later period, and the 
plate is probably based upon a painting by Barto- 
lommeo Montagna, the engraver’s father. 

GriuLro CaMpaGNOLA, born at Padua about 1482, 
is known to have been working in Venice in 1507 
and is assumed to have died shortly after 1914. 
According to contemporary accounts, he was a 
youth of marvellously precocious and varied gifts 
and promise. To his musical and literary accom- 


[162] 


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GIULIO CAMPAGNOLA. GANYMEDE (First State) 


Size of the original engraving, 634 x 474 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


plishments, he added those of painter, miniaturist, 
engraver, and sculptor. 

His engravings betray markedly the influence of 
Giorgione, and his manner of engraving may have 
been an attempt to imitate the rich softness of that 
master’s painting. He worked out and perfected a 
technical system all his own. In his earliest 
manner he works in pure line, as in his copies of 
Durer’s engravings and in such plates as the Old 
Shepherd and St. ferome. 

In the Young Shepherd, the Astrologer, and 
Christ and the Woman of Samaria, the composition 
is first engraved in simple, open lines, with little 
cross-hatching. The plate is then carried forward 
and completed by a system of delicate flicks, so 
disposed as to produce a harmonious result, ob- 
literating substantially all trace of the preliminary 
line work. In the third group, to which two prints 
belong—Naked Woman Reclining and The Stag— 
no lines at all are used, and the plate is carried out, 
from first to last, in flick work. 

Only one of Campagnola’s plates is dated—the 
Astrologer, of 1509. In this he shows himself ripe, 
both as artist and as craftsman. To an earlier 
period would seem to belong the Ganymede, in 
which the landscape is a faithful copy of Diirer’s 
engraving of the Virgin and Child with a Monkey. 
The place which, in the original engraving, was 


[165] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


occupied by the Virgin, is now filled by a clump of 
trees. 

St. Fohn the Baptist is, all things considered, 
Campagnola’s masterpiece. The figure is unques- 
tionably based upon a drawing by Mantegna, and 
has all the largeness and grandeur of style which 
characterizes the work of that master. The land- 
scape background may be original with the en- 
eraver but it clearly shows the influence of Gior- 
gione. In this superb plate Campagnola’s method 
of combining line work with delicate flick work can 
be studied at its best. The Young Shepherd, known 
in two states—the first in pure line, the second 
completed with flick work—is as charming and 
graceful as St. Fohn the Baptist is monumental. It 
justly deserves the reputation and popularity which 
it enjoys among print lovers. 

Christ and the Woman of Samaria is. treated in a 
more open manner than either of the two preceding 
engravings. The beautiful landscape, as also the hill 
to the left, is entirely in line, while the flick work 
upon the figures and garments and, even more no- 
ticeably, in the foreground to the right, is of a more 
open character than that which appears in the 
Young Shepherd. It may belong to the latter part 
of Campagnola’s career as an engraver. There is an 
amplitude in the design of the seated woman which 
suggests Giorgione and Palma, though one cannot 


[166] 


: GIULIO CAMPAGNOLA. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST. 


: Size of the original engraving, 1334 x 94 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 2 


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ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


definitely name any painting by either of these 
masters from, which Campagnola has borrowed his 
figure. 

The last of Campagnola’s plates, left unfinished 
at his death and completed by Domenico Campac- 
NOLA, is Shepherds in a Landscape or, as it 1s some- 
times called, the Musical Shepherds. The original 
drawing, in reverse, for the right-hand half of this 
print is in the Louvre. It 1s unquestionably by 
Giulio Campagnola; but, equally without question, 
the left-hand portion of the engraving itself 1s by 
Domenico. Whether Domenico was a close relative 
or merely a pupil of Giulio’s has not been deter- 
mined; but the Shepherds in a Landscape conclu- 
sively proves that he was at least the artistic heir 
of the older master. Domenico’s style is in marked 
contrast to that of Giulio. Flick work 1s almost 
absent from his engravings, which are executed in 
rather open lines, more in the mode of an etcher 
than of an engraver working according to estab- 
lished tradition. The skies, in particular, have a 
romantic quality which is all their own, and which 
can be seen to advantage in the Shepherd and the 
Old Warrior, dated 1517. 

Marcantonio Ratmonpt, born in Bologna about 
1480, for over three centuries enjoyed a reputation 
eclipsing that of any other Italian master. Of re- 
cent years, however, upon insufficient grounds, he 


[169] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


has been somewhat pushed aside and belittled as a 
“reproductive engraver,” his critics wilfully for- 
getting the fact that, with the exception of Pollai- 
uolo and Mantegna, the Italian School is, in the 
main, derivative, and cannot boast of any original 
engravers of world-wide fame, such as Schongauer 
or Diirer. But Marcantonio was far from being a 
mere translator of alien works. “He is like some 
great composer who borrows another’s theme only 
to make it his own by the originality of his setting.””* 

The earliest influence which we may trace in 
Marcantonio’s work is that of the famous goldsmith 
and painter, Francesco Francia, with whom Marc- 
antonio served his apprenticeship. Certain nielll, 
among them Pyramus and Thisbe and Arion on the 
Dolphin, have been assigned to the young Marc- 
antonio and attributed to this period of his life. 

St. George and the Dragon is strongly reminiscent 
of the niello technique, with its dark shadows, 
against which the figures stand out in relief. The 
landscape is clearly borrowed or adapted from en- 
gravings in Durer’s earlier period, the trees at the 
left, in particular, recalling the Hercules. 

To this early period likewise belongs Pyramus 
and Thisbe, which bears the earliest date—1505— 
which we find upon any of his engravings. It may 


* Marcantonio Raimondi. By Arthur M. Hind. The Print-Collector’s 
Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 3. p. 276. 


[170] 


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MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI. BATHERS 


Size of the original engraving, 1114 x g inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI. ST. CECILIA 
Size of the original engraving, 1014 x 61% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI. DEATH OF LUCRETIA 


Size of the original engraving, 814 x 54 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


well have been executed during his residence in 
Venice, between 1505 and 1509. 

The Bathers, of 1510, is an artistic record of 
Marcantonio’s visit to Florence, on his way to 
Rome. The figures are taken from Michelangelo’s 
cartoon of the Battle of Pisa; but the landscape, 
including the thatched barn to the right, is a faith- 
ful copy, in reverse, of Lucas van Leyden’s plate of 
Mahomet and the Monk Sergius; for Marcantonio, 
like all great artists, freely borrowed his material 
wherever he found it, shaping it to his own ends. 

According to Vasari, it was the Death of Lucretia, 
engraved. shortly after Marcantonio’s arrival in 
Rome, about 110, after a drawing by Raphael, 
which attracted the attention of that master and 
showed him how much he might benefit by the 
reproduction of his work. One would be inclined 
to think that the Death of Dido rather than the 
Death of Lucretia might have been the means of 
bringing about this artistic collaboration; for, if 
Vasari is correct, the immediate result of Raphael’s 
personal influence upon Marcantonio was harmful 
rather than helpful, the Lucretia by general consent 
being the finer plate of the two. 

It is significant that none of Marcantonio’s 
engravings interprets any existing painting by 
Raphael. We may infer that the engraver worked 
entirely after drawings supplied to him by Raphael 


[175] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


—either drawings made for the purpose of being 
interpreted in terms of engraving, or the original 
studies for paintings, which, in their elaboration, 
were subjected to many modifications and changes. 

Among his most interesting engravings are 
Saint Cecilia, which may be compared, or rather 
contrasted, with the famous painting in Bologna; 
the Virgin and Child in the Clouds, which later ap- 
pears as the Madonna di Foligno; and Poetry, based 
on a study by Raphael for the fresco in the Camera 
della Segnatura, in the Vatican. 

The Massacre of the Innocents, usually accounted 
the engraver’s masterpiece, is one of several sub- 
jects of which two plates exist. Authorities disagree 
as to which is the “‘original,” but some familiarity 
with both versions leads one to think that Marcan- 
tonio may well have been his own interpreter. At 
least one cannot name certainly any other en- 
graver capable of producing either of the two 
versions of the Massacre of the Innocents, in point 
of drawing or of technique. 

Among Marcantonio’s portrait plates one of the 
most attractive is that of PAilotheo Achillini (“The 
Guitar Player’), which is in his early manner and 
probably dates from his Bolognese period. It may 
be based upon a drawing by Francia, but the trees 
and distant landscape all show markedly the influ- 
ence of Direr. 


[176] 


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MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI. PHILOTHEO ACHILLINI 
(“The Guitar Player’) 
Size of the original engraving, 714 x 514 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI. PIETRO ARETINO 


Size of the original engraving, 738 x 574 inches 
In the British Museum 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING 


To a much later period, and engraved in Marc- 
antonio’s most mature manner, belongs the por- 
trait of Pietro Aretino. Vasari refers to this plate as 
“engraved from life,” but its richness and color 
would seem to point to an original by Titian or 
Sebastiano del Piombo. 

After the death of Raphael, in 1520, Marcanto- . 
nio’s engraving undergoes a change—a change for 
the worse, as might be expected, since a number of 
his plates are interpretations of designs by Giulio 
Romano. There is less care in the drawing, less 
delicacy in the management of the burin, and, 
although we may pity him for the loss of all that 
he possessed at the sack of Rome, in 1527, we can- 
not greatly regret that, as an engraver, Marc- 
antonio’s active life terminates with that date. 


[179] 


ITALIAN ENGRAVING: MANTEGNA TO 
MARCANTONIO RAIMONDI 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Mantecna, ANDREA (1431-1506) 

Direr anp Mantecna. By Sidney Colvin. 5 illustrations. The Portfolio, 
Vol. 8, pp. 54-63. London. 1877. 

Anprea ManTEGNA AND THE ITALIAN PRE-RAPHAELITE ENGRAVERS. Edited 
by Arthur Mayger Hind. 75 reproductions. London and New York: Fred- 
erick A. Stokes Company. n.d. (Great Engravers.) 

Anprea Mantecna. By Paul Kristeller. 26 plates and 162 text illustrations. 
London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1901. Chapter XI, Mantegna as Engraver. 


Manrsecna. By H. Thode. 105 illustrations. Bielefeld and Leipzig: Vel- 
hagen & Klasing. 1897. (Kiinstler Monographien. 27.) 


BaRBARI, JACOPO DE’ (c. 1440-C. 1515) 


Encravincs aNd Woopcuts By JAcopo DE’ Barsari. Edited by Paul Kris- 
teller. 33 reproductions and 2 text illustrations. London. 1896. (Interna- 
tional Chalcographical Society, 1896.) 

Lorenzo Lorro. By Bernhard Berenson. 30 plates. New York: Putnam’s 
Sons. 1895. pp. 34-50. 


CampaGNno.a, GIULIO (c. 1482-c. 1514) 


Giutio CampaGNoLa; KuprERSTICHE UND ZEICHNUNGEN. Edited by Paul 
Kristeller. 27 reproductions. Berlin: Bruno Cassirer. 1907. (Graphische 
Gesellschaft. Publication 5.) 


Marcantonio Ratmonpt (c. 1480—c. 1§30) 


Marc-AnTOINE RaAIMONDI; ETUDE HISTORIQUE ET CRITIQUE SUIVIE D’UN 
CATALOGUE RAISONNE DES OEUVRES DU MAITRE. By Henri Delaborde. 63 illus- 
trations. Paris: Librairie de l’art. 1888. 


Marcantonio Rarmonpi. By Arthur Mayger Hind. 22 illustrations. The 
Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 3, pp. 243-276. Boston. 1913. 


MarcaNnToNnio AND ITALIAN ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS OF THE SIXTEENTH 
Century. Edited by Arthur Mayger Hind. 65 reproductions. London and 
New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company. n.d. (Great Engravers.) 


[180] 


SOME MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


OU will all remember how John Evelyn, writ- 
ing to Samuel Pepys, advised him to collect 
engraved portraits—since, in his own words, “Some 
are so well done to the life, that they may stand 
comparison with the best paintings.”* He then adds: 
“This were a cheaper, and so much a more useful, 
curiosity, as they seldom are without their names, 
_ages and eulogies of the persons whose portraits 
they represent. I say you will be exceedingly 
pleased to contemplate the effigies of those who 
have made such a noise and bustle in the world; 
either by their madness and folly; or a more con- 
spicuous figure, by their wit and learning. They 
will greatly refresh you in your study and by your 
fireside, when you are many years returned.” We 
know by his “Diary” that Pepys became an en- 
thusiastic collector and that he went over to Paris 
to buy many of Robert Nanteuil’s engraved por- 
traits—at a later date commissioning his wife to 
secure for him many more, which he strongly 
desired. 
From the time of Evelyn and Pepys in England, 
and that prince of print-collectors in France, the 


[181] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Abbé de Marolles—who in 1666 could boast of 
possessing over 123,000 prints, “‘and all the por- 
traits extant’’—portraits have had, for the student, 
a peculiar fascination, and it may be interesting to 
consider briefly the work of some six or eight of the 
acknowledged masters of the art. 

Aside from two unimportant plates by the Mas- 
ter of the Amsterdam Cabinet, which may, or may 
not, be portraits, the earliest engraver to address 
himself to portraiture, pure and simple, is the 
anonymous German master with the monogram 


we 8B. So far as we know, he executed four 
plates only (c. 1480-1485). In them the character- 
ization is strong, the drawing clear and vigorous. 
The artist’s technique may have owed something to 
Martin Schongauer, but it is singularly lacking in 
the refinement and balance which mark the work 
of that engraver. 

Danie Hoprer, who, in 1493, was already work- 
ing in Augsburg, has left us an etching, which cer- 
tainly cannot be later than 1504, and may have 
been executed five, or even ten, years earlier. It 
is a portrait of Kunz von der Rosen, the Jester- 
Adviser of the Emperor Maximilian I. The etching 
is upon iron, and the quality of the line is well 
adapted to the rugged character of the personage. 
This plate was copied, in reverse, with some modi- 
fications, by an anonymous North Italian engraver 


[182] 


MASTER W@B. HEAD OF A YOUNG WOMAN 
Size of the original engraving, 434 x 334 inches 
In the Royal Print Room, Berlin 


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ALBRECHT DURER. ALBERT OF BRANDENBURG 


Size of the original engraving, 534 x 374 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


and reappears as Gonsalvo of Cordova, who was in 
Italy, in command of the army of Ferdinand V 
of Castile, between 1494 and 1504, when Ferdi- 
nand’s jealousy caused him to be superseded in 
the Vice Royalty of Naples. 

The earliest in date of Direr’s engraved por- 
traits is likewise the best. d/bert of Brandenburg 
was twenty-nine years of age, in 1519, when Diirrer 
engraved this plate. There is a concentration upon 
the purely portrait element lacking in some of the 
later prints. The burin work is singularly delicate 
and beautiful. Indeed, nothing better, from a tech- 
nical standpoint, has ever been done on copper than 
Diirer’s six portrait plates; and if he at times suc- 
cumbs to the temptation of rendering each minor 
detail with the same loving care which he bestows 
upon the face itself, he remains, notwithstanding, 
one of the greatest masters of the burin the world 
has seen. 

Durer engraved a second plate of 4/bert of Bran- 
denburg, in 1§23. The intervening four years had 
left their mark upon the Cardinal, and neither as 
a portrait nor as an engraving is it as pleasing as 
the earlier one. In the following year, 1524, there 
are two portraits—frederic the Wise, Elector of 
Saxony and Wilibald Pirkheimer. The former was 
one of the earliest patrons of Durer and likewise 
one of the most liberal-minded princes of his time. 


[185] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


The plate is executed in Diirer’s painstaking and 
careful manner, nor does it lack, as a portrait, 
the directness and immediacy of appeal of the 
silver-point drawing, which may have served as 
its original. Wilibald Pirkheimer, the celebrated 
patrician and humanist, was Direr’s life-long 
and most intimate friend, and it is to him that 
Direr’s letters from Venice were addressed. 

Philip Melanchthon is the simplest in treatment 
and the most satisfying, in its elimination of un- 
necessary detail, of Durer’s portrait engravings, 
and is the best likeness of the mild reformer. The 
inscription reads: “Durer could depict the features 
of the living Philip, but the skilled hand could not 
depict his mind.”’ Here Dtirer does himself less 
than justice, for it is the portrait-like character 
which makes this engraving still noteworthy after 
the lapse of four centuries. 

To the same year, 1526, belongs Erasmus of 
Rotterdam. It 1s a technical masterpiece. Durer 
has lavished all his skill upon this plate. It is 
magnificent; but from a purely portrait standpoint, 
it is a magnificent failure. 

For a full hundred years we have no portraits of 
note; then there enters upon the scene one of the 
great princes of the art—Van Dycx—whose etched 
portraits vie with those of Rembrandt in vitality, 
and surpass them in immediacy of appeal. Van 


[186] 


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ALBRECHT DURER. PHILIP MELANCHTHON 


Size of the original engraving, 674 x 5 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ANTHONY VAN DYCK. PORTRAIT OF HIMSELF (First State) 


Size of the original etching, 94 x 634 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


Dyck had not that deep humanity, that profound 
reading of human character, which raises Rem- 
brandt above all rivals; but upon the purely tech- 
nical side, working within the truest traditions of 
etching, with due regard to its possibilities and its 
limitations, Van Dyck may claim precedence. His 
fifteen original portrait etchings (together with 
Erasmus of Rotterdam, after Holbein) undoubtedly 
belong to the period between his return from Italy 
to Antwerp, in 1626, and his settlement in London, 
in 1632. From the very first, Van Dyck seems to 
_ have been in possession of all his powers. His etch- 
ings show various modes of treatment, according to 
the character of the sitter, and it would be difficult 
to speak of the development of his art, since, by the 
grace of God, he seems to have been a born etcher. 

Van Dyck’s Portrait of Himself naturally inter- 
ests us most, on account of its subject. So far as 
Van Dyck has seen fit to carry it, it is a perfect 
work of art, not the least remarkable feature being 
the splendid placing of the head upon the plate. 
Unfortunately, the first state is of such excessive 
rarity that the majority of print students can know 
this superb portrait only through reproductions (in 
which much of its delicacy is necessarily lost) or, 
in the later state, where the plate is finished with 
the graver by Jacob Neefs—a distressing piece of 
work, strangely enough, countenanced by Van 


[189] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Dyck himself; since in the British Museum there 
is a touched counter-proof of the first state, which 
proves that Van Dyck directed the elaboration of 
the plate, no doubt with the intention of using it 
as a title page to the /conography, a series of a 
hundred engraved portraits of his friends and con- 
temporaries. 

Of even subtler beauty is Suyders, unfortunately 
—like the portrait of Van Dyck himself—of the 
greatest rarity and also, like that plate, finished 
with the graver by Jacob Neefs. It is perfectly 
satisfying from every point of view, combining, as 
it does, the greatest freedom with absolute certainty 
of hand. The treatment of the face shows a 
thorough knowledge of all the technical resources 
of the art, the high lights having been “stopped 
out”’ exactly where needed, the etched dots and 
lines melting into a perfect harmony. 

In marked contrast to the delicacy of Snyders 
is the bolder and more rugged treatment of Yan 
Snellinx. Fortunately, the plate has remained, un- 
til our own day, in essentially the same condition 
as when it left Van Dyck’s hands, and we can bet- 
ter realize what an artistic treasure-house the [con- 
ography might have been, had the public possessed 
the intelligence to appreciate, at their true worth, 
these fine flowerings of Van Dyck’s genius, instead 
of demanding, as they did, that a plate be abso- 


[19°] 


ANTHONY VAN DYCK. FRANS SNYDERS (First State) 


Size of the original etching, 914 x 6% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ANTHONY VAN DYCK. LUCAS VORSTERMAN (First State) 


Size of the original engraving, 934 x 614 inches 
In the Collection of Charles C. Walker, Esq. 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


lutely “finished” to the four corners by the pro- 
fessional engraver. 

Lucas Vorsterman is, in some ways, the most 
purely pictorial of Van Dyck’s portrait etchings. 
Even the taste of the time demanded no further 
elaboration than an engraved background, which, 
judiciously added, left undisturbed Van Dyck’s 
original work. 

It would be interesting to know whether Rem- 
BRANDT was acquainted with the etched work of 
Van Dyck. If so, it is all the more astounding that 
his work should betray no trace of any outside in- 


~ fluence. 


Rembrandt’s earliest dated etching is also, seem- 
ingly, his first etching—a Portrait of His Mother, of 
the year 1628—an unsurpassed little masterpiece. 
In its own mode of simple, direct, open, linear 
treatment, there is nothing finer, even in the work 
of Rembrandt himself. Saskia with Pearls in Her 
Hair, of 1634, as also the Young Man in a Velvet 
Cap with books Beside Him, which belongs to the 
year 1637, are in Rembrandt’s best manner, but 
the crowning triumph of this period is unquestion- 
ably Rembrandt Leaning on a Stone Sill, bearing the 
date 1639 and showing Rembrandt at the happiest 
period of his life—successful, prosperous, and per- 
fect master of his medium. 

The portrait of an Old Man in a Divided Fur 


[193] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Cap, of the following year, is likewise admirable— 
not a line too much and every line full of signifi- 
cance. ‘Yan Cornelis Sylvius, of 1646, shows in a 
marked degree Rembrandt’s sympathy with, and 
appreciation of the beauty of old age. The face is 
treated in a delicate and sensitive manner, and, 
with the fewest possible strokes, Rembrandt has 
indicated the texture and growth of the sparse 
beard of his aged sitter. Sulphur-tint has been used 
to give additional modelling to the face, while the 
background and costume are finished in a way 
which would have won the admiration of Dtrer 
himself. Ephraim Bonus, ‘fan Asselyn, and fan S1x 
are Rembrandt’s three portrait etchings for the 
year 1647. fan Six is Rembrandt’s masterpiece, so 
far as elaborate finish is concerned. He has availed 
himself of all the resources of etching, dry-point, 
and of the burin—used freely as an etcher may use 
it—to carry forward this plate. The center of the 
room is bathed in subdued light, which melts into 
rich and mysterious shadows in the corners. 
Rembrandt Drawing at a Window is one of the 
most characterful of his portraits. It shows him at 
the age of forty-two. Years of sorrow have left 
their mark upon his countenance, but what a 
strong, resolute face it is! Clement de ‘fonghe (which 
should be seen in the first state before the expres- 
sion of the face was entirely changed) is executed 


[194] 


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REMBRANDT. JAN CORNELIS SYLVIUS 


Size of the original etching, 1074 x 74 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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REMBRANDT. REMBRANDT LEANING ON A STONE SILL 


Size of the original etching, 814 x 6% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


CLEMENT D 


Size of the original etching, 


REMBRANDT. 


E JONGHE (First State) 


x 63% inches 


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REMBRANDT. JAN LUTMA (First State) 


Size of the original etching, 774 x 57 inches 
Tn the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


in Rembrandt’s open, linear manner, without 
strong contrasts of light and dark. For beauty of 
drawing and subtlety of observation, it is one of 
his finest plates. Old Haaring, of 1655, is a magnifi- 
cent dry-point, in which Rembrandt has built up, 
with many lines, a completely harmonious picture; 
but for grip of character and straightforward pres- 
entation of the personality of his sitter, it must 
yield precedence to the unsurpassed Fan Lutma, of 
the following year. This portrait, in the first state, 
before the introduction of the window in the back- — 
ground, is one of Rembrandt’s most mature works, 
in that the method is perfectly adapted to the re- 
sult desired. 

In France there is little of significance in portrait 
engraving during the sixteenth century. THomas 
DE Leu and Léonarp Gau tier based their style 
upon the miniature portrait engravers of the North- 
ern School, such as the Wierix. Although their 
graver work is often quite beautiful, it lacks origi- 
nality, and when, as frequently happened, they 
endeavored to interpret the wonderful drawings of 
the Clouets or Dumonstier, they signally failed in 
capturing the charm of their originals. 

CiaupE MEttan, who was born at Abbeville in 
1$98, is, 1n a sense, the fountain-head of French 
portrait engraving. His work is characteristically 
French, in that it is the result of a system carefully 


[199] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


worked out to its logical conclusion. In his desire 
to keep strictly within the limits of what he con- 
sidered to be the proper province of engraving, he 
carried his insistence upon line to a point which 
borders on mannerism and which, for over two 
centuries, has militated against his full recognition. 

Mellan’s earliest engravings recall the work of 
Léonard Gaultier, but his first teacher is not known. 
Dissatisfied with his instruction in Paris, in 1624 
he went to Rome where, while studying engraving 
under Villamena, he came under the influence of 
the French painter, Simon Vouet, who not only 
provided his protégé with drawings to engrave, but 
persuaded him to base all his training upon a 
thorough ground-work of drawing. It is this severe 
training as a draughtsman which lies at the foun- 
dation of Mellan’s style. His original drawings 
were executed in pencil, silver-point, or chalk, and 
in his engravings he preserves all the delicate and 
elusive charm of his originals. 

His manner of engraving is peculiar to himself. 
The inventor of a mode, he so uses it as to exhaust 
its possibilities and leaves nothing for his success- 
ors to do along similar lines. Consequently, al- 
though his influence on French portrait engraving 
was great and far-reaching, he cannot, in any true 
sense, be considered as the founder of a “‘school.”’ 
Even in his early portrait plates (incidentally, 


[200] 


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CLAUDE MELLAN. VIRGINIA DA VEZZO 


Size of the original engraving, 414 x 3 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


NICOLAVS CLAVDIVS FABRICIVS | 
DE PEIRESC SENATOR AQVENSIS | 


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MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


among the most charming and perfect), such as 
Virginia de Vezzo, the wife of Simon Vouet, en- 
graved in Rome in 1626, we find his style fully 
developed. Save for four little spots of deepest 
shadow, the entire portrait is executed in single, 
uncrossed lines, indicating, by their direction, the 
contour of the face, which is delicately modelled, 
while the flow of the hair is realistically and beauti- 
fully expressed. From this simple, linear method, 
adopted thus early, Mellan, with few unimportant 
exceptions, never departed; and although he lived 
and worked until 1688, surviving Morin by twenty- 
two years and Robert Nanteuil by ten, he held 
to his own self-appointed course, his work show- 
ing no trace whatever of the influence of his two 
most distinguished contemporaries. 

Among his many portraits choice is difficult, but, 
by general consent, his style is seen at its very best 
in Fabri de Peiresc, which excels in point of drawing, 
grip of character, and straightforwardness of pres- 
entation. It is dated 1637 and was engraved on his 
way from Rome to Paris, in which city he settled, 
enjoying for many years a reputation and success 
second to none. Of his other portraits mention 
must be made of Henriette-Marie de Buade Fronte- 
nac, of a delightful silvery quality, and of her 
husband, Henri-Louis Habert de Montmor, the rich- 
est toned of all his works. Nicolas Fouquet likewise 


[203] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


is of peculiar interest, inasmuch as in this plate 
Mellan has departed for once from his invariable 
method of pure line work and has modelled the 
face with an elaborate system of dots, in the 
manner of Morin. 

Jean Morin was Mellan’s junior by two years. 
His style is in the greatest contrast to that of the 
older master, not only technically, but in that he 
was always a reproductive engraver, never designing 
his own portraits, the majority of his plates being 
after the paintings of Philippe de Champaigne. His 
plates are executed almost entirely in pure etching, 
with just sufficient burin work to give crispness and 
decision. The heads are elaborately modelled, with 
many minute dots, recalling somewhat Van Dyck’s 
manner in such a portrait as Snyders. 

Antoine Vitré, the famous printer, shows Morin’s 
method at its richest; its brilliancy and color place 
‘it in the forefront of French portraits, though for 
charm it may not rank with Anne of Austria or 
Cardinal Richelieu, both after paintings by Philippe — 
de Champaigne. 

Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, after Van Dyck, well 
deserves the reputation which it has so long en- 
joyed. It is, furthermore, significant as an example 
of Morin’s power of concentrating all the attention 
upon the countenance of his sitter. He was pri- 
marily a portrait engraver and never allowed him- 


[204] 


JEAN MORIN. CARDINAL GUIDO BENTIVOGLIO 


Size of the original engraving, 1114 x 94 inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


ROBERT NANTEUIL. POMPONE DE BELLIEVRE 


Size of the original engraving, 1274 x 97% inches 
In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


self to be seduced, as were such eighteenth century 
masters as the Drevets, into lavishing his skill upon 
the purely ornamental accessories, to the detriment 
of the portrait itself. Fine though Van Dyck’s full- 
length painting is, Morin is more than justified in 
taking from it the head and bust only, since thereby 
he gives to his plate a vivid and compelling quality 
which otherwise would be lacking. 

Rospert NANTEUIL is not only the greatest of 
French portrait engravers; he is one of the greatest 
portraitists in the history of French art. In his work 
the clarity and logic of the French temperament is 
enriched by a study of the engravers of the Flemish 
and Dutch schools, though in Nanteuil’s plates 
color is never sought at the expense of balance. His 
technique is a fusion of the best elements of Mellan 
and of Morin. From Mellan he derived his care- 
fully balanced system of open line work, while 
Morin doubtless suggested to him the use of graver 
flicks in modelling the face. 

The date of Nanteuil’s birth is variously given 
as 1623, 1625, and 1630, the last-named date, which 
is accepted by Robert-Dumesnil, corresponding 
best with what we know regarding the development 
of his work. | 

His first portrait plates were done in 1648, the 
year in which he came to Paris, and from that time 
onwards he devoted himself almost exclusively to 


[207] 


ENGRAVERS. AND ETCHERS 


portraiture, until his death in 1678. His engravings 
form a gallery illustrating the reign of Louis XIV, 
from the King himself, whom he engraved no fewer 
than eleven times, to the Norman peasant and 
poet, Loret (incidentally, one of Nanteuil’s finest 
satirized each 


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portrait plates), whose “Gazette 
day “‘the intriguing nobles who were not afraid of 
bullets, but who were in deadly fear of winter mud.” 
- An interesting story is told of Nanteuil’s début 
in Paris. It is said that he received his first order 
by following some divinity students to a wine-shop, 
where they were wont to take their meals. There, 
having chosen one of the portrait drawings he had 
brought from Rheims, he pretended to look for a 
sitter whose name and address he had forgotten. It 
is superfluous to add that the picture was not 
_ recognized, but it was passed from hand to hand, 
the price was asked, the artist was modest in his 
demands, and before the end of the repast his 
career had begun. 

One of the most interesting portraits, in his early 
manner, is that of Cardinal de Retz, engraved in 
1650. Morin has likewise left us a portrait of this 
personage, and it is instructive to compare the two 
engravings. In Nanteuil’s the background is still 
somewhat stiff, but the costume is treated simply 
and directly, while the face shows a judicious 


blending of line and dot work. 
[208] 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


Nothing could be finer and more reticent than 
Marie de Bragelogne of 1656. The pale, elderly, and 
somewhat sad face of this old love of Cardinal 
Richelieu is treated with the greatest sympathy. 
For the most part, it is modelled with delicate 
flick work, and where lines are employed, they are 
so used as to blend perfectly into a harmonious 
whole. In contrast to the face, the collar is ren- 
dered in long, flowing lines, without cross-hatching, 
entirely in the manner of Claude Mellan. It is 
from Nanteuil’s own drawing from life and is 
perhaps the most beautiful of the eight engraved 
portraits of women we have from his hand. 

Pompone de Belliévre, of 1657, after Le Brun’s 
painting, has enjoyed among collectors the reputa- 
tion of being the most beautiful of all engraved 
portraits. Fine it undoubtedly is; but it lacks that 
grip of character which is so conspicuously present 
in Nanteuil’s engravings from life, and for compel- 
ling portrait quality it falls short of Pierre Seguier, 
engraved in the same year, likewise after Le Brun’s 
painting. ean Loret certainly does not owe its fame 
to the beauty of the personage portrayed. It is one 
of Nanteuil’s most convincing and vital plates. 
The modelling of the face and the means employed 
are absolutely adequate. This engraving alone 
would explain why, in his day, Nanteuil’s greatest 
fame rested upon the surprisingly lifelike quality 


[209] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


of his work, whether it be pastel, drawing, or en- 
graving. 

To the year 1658 also belongs Basile Fouquet, 
brother of Nicolas Fouquet, the famous Superin- 
tendent of Finance. Not less beautiful than Pom- 
pone de Belliévre, there 1s.a vitality about the 
Basile Fouquet lacking in the better-known piate. 

Three years later, in 1661, Nanteuil engraved the 
portrait of Nicolas Fouquet—one of his master- 
pieces of characterization. Nothing could be finer 
than the way in which he has portrayed the great 
finance minister, whose ambition it was to succeed 
Mazarin as virtual ruler of the kingdom. It is a 
historical document of prime importance, of the 
greatest beauty, and preserves for all time the 
features of the then most powerful man in France, 
gazing out upon the world with a half quizzical 
expression, totally unaware of the sensational re- 
versal of Fortune already drawing near. 

A plate not less admirable in its way—a little 
masterpiece—is Frangots de la Mothe le Vayer, who 
was regarded as the Plutarch of his time for his 
boundless erudition and his mode of reasoning. 
Nanteuil’s engraving shows him at the age of 
seventy-five, in full possession of all his intellectual 
powers and in the enjoyment of that good health 
which lasted until his death, eleven years later, at 
the ripe age of eighty-six. 


[210] 


ROBERT NANTEUIL. BASILE FOUQUET 


Size of the original engraving, 1274 x 97 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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ROBERT NANTEUIL. JEAN LORET 


Size of the original engraving, 1024 x 734 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


The masterly portrait of Turenne, engraved in 
1663, after a painting by Philippe de Champaigne, 
is one of the engraver’s most vigorous plates, of a 
size somewhat larger than had hitherto been his 
wont. From this period date the life-size portraits, 
thirty-six of which were completed before he died 
in 1678, the last four years of his life being devoted 
entirely to these large plates—seven of them of the 
King himself. They were obviously intended to be 
framed and hung above the high wainscots used 
in those times, and although they do not show 
Nanteuil at his best, and—in the majority of cases 
—are, in part, the work of assistants, they are a 
remarkable performance. 

Nanteuil established the tradition of portrait 
engraving in France once and for all, and although 
his successors, profiting by his example, have left 
us many superbly engraved plates, none of them 
were able to combine the qualities of great engraver 
with great portraitist, which make Nanteuil su- 
preme in the history of portrait engraving. 

The nineteenth century has produced three mas- 
ter portrait etchers. Of what previous century can 
we say as much? Other portraits may possess more 
charm, but none have a greater measure of dignity 
than those by AtpHonse Lecros. He has been 
called a “‘belated old master,” 
plates are combined the qualities which prove him 


[213] 


and in his portrait 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


to be a master indeed—not old, in the sense of out ot 
touch with his time, but displaying the same quali- 
ties which make the portraits of Rembrandt or Van 
Dyck so compelling and of such continuing interest. 

Cardinal Manning—the triumph of. spirit over 
flesh—simple, austere; G. F. Watts, in which the 
gravity and beauty of old age is portrayed as no one 
since Rembrandt has portrayed it, are plates which 
will assure his artistic immortality. 

Mr. WuistLer, when asked which of his etch- 
ings he considered the best, is reported to have an- 
swered, “All.” Fortunately for us, in the case of 
his portraits he has indicated his preference. “One 
of my very best” is written beneath a proof of Annie 
Haden, now in the Lenox Library; and Whistler, 
in the course of conversation with Mr. E. G. Ken- 
nedy, told him that if he had to make a decision as 
to which plate was his best, he would rest his repu- 
tation upon Annie Haden. It is the culmination 
of that wonderful series to which belong such 
masterpieces as Becquet, Drouet, Finette, Arthur 
Haden, Mr. Mann and Riault, the Engraver. Whistler 
himself never surpassed this portrait, which for 
perfect balance, certainty of hand, and sheer charm, 
is not only one of the most delightful portrait plates 
in the history of the art, but one of the few success- 
ful representations of the elusive charm of young 


girlhood. 
[214] 


J. A. McN. WHISTLER. ANNIE HADEN 


Size of the original dry-point, 1374 x 834 inches 
In the Collection of Howard Mansfield, Esq 


J. A. McN. WHISTLER. RIAULT, THE ENGRAVER 
Size of the original dry-point, 874 x 574 inches 
In the Collection of Howard Mansfield, Esq. 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


Hardly less beautiful are the portraits of Florence 
Leyland, standing, holding her hoop in her right 
hand, every line of the slender figure rhythmic and 
beautiful; or of Fanny Leyland, seated, the soft 
flounces of her white muslin dress indicated with 
the fewest and most delicate lines; or Weary, lying 
back in her chair, with hair outspread. Weary sug- 
gests the Fenny of Rossetti’s poem, ‘but it is a 
portrait of “Jo”’—Joanna Heffernan — whom 
Whistler painted as The White Girl and La Belle 
[rlandaise, and of whom, in 1861, two years pre- 
viously, he had made a superb dry-point. 

Of Whistler’s portraits of men, Riault is as- 
suredly one of the finest, both in execution and in 
portrayal of character. The concentration of the 
wood-engraver on his task is expressed with con- 
vincing power, and those who mistakenly attribute 
to Whistler grace at the expense of strength could 
hardly do better than study this dry-point. 

Could there be a greater contrast than the work 
of Whistler and Zorn? Could anything better 
illustrate the infinite possibilities of the art, the 
pliability of the medium to serve the needs of 
etchers as dissimilar in method as in point of 
attack? With the fewest possible lines (s/ashed, 
one might almost say, into the copper) Zorn 
evolves a portrait of compelling power,vibrant with 
life. Mere speed counts for little, and it is of small 


[ty] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


significance that a masterpiece such as Ernest Renan 
is the result of a single sitting of one hour only. It 
was done in Renan’s studio in Paris, in April, 1892. 
“His friends,” the artist relates, ‘““came and asked 
me to make an etching of him. He arranged for a 
sitting. He was very ill, but I sat studying him for 
a little while, then took the plate and drew him. I 
asked him if it was a characteristic pose and he 
replied, ‘No, I very seldom sit like this.’ But his 
wife came in and said, “You have caught him to 
perfection, it is himself. When he is not watched 
he is always like that.’ She was really touched by 
it.” What is significant in the portrait of Renan, 
astounding, one might say, is that with lines so 
few Zorn has given us not only the outer man, 
but a character study of profound insight. Renan, 
sunk in his chair, the bulky body topped by the 
massive head, the hair suggested with a mere 
handful of lines, was like a bomb-shell to such 
print-collectors as previously were unacquainted 
with Zorn’s work. It was, however, only one of a 
group of masterpieces with which the artist made 
his début in America, in 1892: Zorn and His Wife, 
Faure, The Waltz, The Omnibus, Olga Bratt, with 
its elusive charm, and the piquant Girl with the 
Cigarette, and Madame Simon, which still remains 
one of his most powerful portraits. 

The Toast is etched from Zorn’s picture painted 


[218] 


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sayoul 8¢£1 x $6 SSuryojo [BUISIIO 9Y} Jo 9zIS 


NVNia LSHNYH “NYOZ SYHANV 


ANDERS ZORN. THE TOAST 


Size of the original etching, 125¢ x 1034 inches 


In the Collection of Albert W. Scholle, Esq. 


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ANDERS ZORN. MADAME SIMON 


Size of the original etching, 934 x 614 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


NDERS ZORN. MISS EMMA RASSMUSSEN 


Size of the original etching, 774 x 57% inches 
In the Collection of the Author 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


by him to celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of the 
Society of the Idun, a scientific and artistic society 
in Stockholm. Wieselgren, the President of the 
Society, a Viking-like figure, is about to propose a 
toast; beyond him, characterized with the fewest 
lines, are seen Nordenskjold, the Arctic explorer; 
Hildebrand, the archeologist; Axel Key, professor 
of medicine; and Woern, the Minister of Finance. 
The plate has all the freshness, all the spontaneity, 
of an etching done directly from life and at a white 
heat. 

Among his many portraits of women, it is dif_- 
cult to make a selection. Miss Anna Burnett, 
seated at the Piano, is charming. Annie, Mrs. Gran- 
berg, and Kesti—each, in its own way, fascinates 
us; but if one were to express a personal preference, 
it would be for Miss Emma Rassmussen. The blond 
beauty of her hair, the fair, tender flesh, sparkling 
eyes, and lips slightly open, showing the firm, small, 
even teeth, are in perfect harmony. The line is 
more delicate than is the artist’s wont, and both 
as a portrait and as an etching it is a lasting delight. 


[223] 


SOME MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Prints AND THEIR Makers. Edited by FitzRoy Carrington. 200 illustrations. 
New York: Century Co. 1912. 
Ercuine anD Ercuers. By Philip Gilbert Hamerton. 35 original etchings. 
London: Macmillan & Co. 1868. 

. Same. 6th edition. Boston: Roberts Brothers. 1892. 
Tue Goipen AGE or Encravine. By Frederick Keppel. 262 illustrations. 
New York: The Baker and Taylor Company. 1gio. 
Tue Best Porrrairs 1n Encravinc. By Charles Sumner. New York: 
Frederick Keppel. 1875. 


Direr, ALBrecut (see Bibliography under “The Master of 
the Amsterdam Cabinet and Albrecht Durer,” page 137). 


Van Dyck, AntTHony (1599-1641) 


EAux-FORTES DE ANTOINE VAN Dyck; REPRODUITES ET PUBLIGES PAR AMAND- 
Duranp. Edited by Georges Duplessis. 21 reproductions. Paris: Amand- 
Durand. 1874. 

Van Dyck; Hts Oricinat Ercuincs anp His Iconocrapny. By Arthur 
Mayger Hind. 38 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, 2 parts. 
Part I. Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 3-37. Part II. Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 220-253. Boston. 
IgIs. 

————.. Reprinted in revised form. 36 illustrations. Boston: Houghton 
Mifflin Company. 1915. 

Van Dyck anp Porrrair ENGRAVING AND ErcHINnG IN THE SEVENTEENTH 
Century. Edited by Arthur Mayger Hind. 65 reproductions. London and 
New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company. n.d. (Great Engravers.) 

Van Dyck. By H. Knackfuss. Translated by Campbell Dodgson. 55 illus- 
trations. Bielefeld and Leipzig: Velhagen & Klasing. 1899. (Monographs 
on Artists.) 

Ercuincs or Van Dycx. Edited by Frank Newbolt. 34 reproductions. 
London: George Newnes. n. d. 

Ercuincs sy Van Dyck By Walter H. Sparrow. With an introduction by H. 
Singer. 23 reproductions of the first states. London: Hodder & Stoughton. 
1905. 

L’IconocGrapHIE D’ANTOINE VAN Dyck, D’APRES LES RECHERCHES DE H. 
Weser. By Friedrich Wibiral. 1 reproduction and 6 plates of watermarks. 
Leipzig: A. Danz. 1877. 


RemBranpt Harmensz vAN Rin (1606-1669) 


Tue Ercuep Work or RemBranpt; A MonocrapH (WRITTEN As InTRO- 
DUCTION TO THE BuRLINGToN CLUB ExuiBiTIoN, 1877) WITH AN APPENDIX 


[224] 


MASTERS OF PORTRAITURE 


REsPECTING APPROPRIATION OF THE ForEGoING IN MippLETON’s DescriP- 
TIVE Catatocur. By Francis Seymour Haden. London: Macmillan & Co. 
1879. 

Tue Ercuincs or Rempranpt. By Philip Gilbert Hamerton. 4 reproductions 
and 36 text illustrations. London: Seeley & Co. 1902. (Portfolio Mono- 
graphs.) 

Rempranpt’s Ercuincs; AN Essay anp A CaTaLoGur, wirH Some Notes 
on THE Drawincs. By Arthur Mayger Hind. London: Methuen & Co. 1912. 
Volume 1, Text (with 34 plates illustrating the drawings). Volume 2, 
Illustrations (330 reproductions). 

Ercuincs or Rempranpt. Edited by Arthur Mayger Hind. 62 reproductions. 
London and New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company. 1907. (Great En- 


gravers.) 


Rempranpot. By H. Knackfuss. Translated by Campbell Dodgson. 159 
illustrations. Bielefeld and Leipzig: Velhagen & Klasing. 1899. (Mono- 
graphs on Artists.) 


Remsranpt’s Amsterpam. By Frits Lugt. 27 illustrations and map. The 
Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 111-169. Boston. 1915. 


Rempranpt; His Lire, Hts Work, anp His Tims. By Emile Michel. Trans- 
' lated by Florence Simmonds. Edited by Frederick Wedmore. 2 volumes. 317 
illustrations. London: William Heinemann. 1895. 


L’orUVRE GRAVE DE REMBRANDT; REPRODUCTIONS DES PLANCHES DANS 
TOUT LEURS ETATS SUCCESSIFS, AVEC UN CATALOGUE RAISONNE. By Dmitri 
Rovinski. 1000 reproductions. St. Petersburg: L’Académie Impériale des 
Sciences. 1890. Volume 1, Text. Volumes 2-4, Reproductions. 

. Supplement. Collected by D. Rovinski. Arranged and de- 
scribed by N. Tchétchouline. 94 reproductions. St. Petersburg: S. N. Kotoff, 
and Leipzig: Karl W. Hiersemann. 1914. 


KririscHes VERZEICHNIS DER RADIERUNGEN REMBRANDTS, ZUGLEICH EINE 
ANLEITUNG ZU DEREN Stuprum. By Woldemar von Seidlitz. Leipzig: E. A. 
Seemann. 1895. 


Rempranpt; DES MEIsTers RaDIERUNGEN IN 402 ABBILDUNGEN. Edited by 
Hans Wolfgang Singer. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. 
1906. (Klassiker der Kunst. Vol. 8.) 


Portrait ENGRAVING IN FRANCE 


DE LA GRAVURE DU PORTRAIT EN France. By Georges Duplessis. Paris: 
Rapilly. 1875. 

LE PEINTRE-GRAVEUR FRANGAIS; UN CATALOGUE RAISONNE D’ESTAMPES 
GRAVEES PAR LES PEINTRES ET LES DESSINATEURS DE L’£COLE FRANCAISE, 
OUVRAGE FAISANT SUITE AU PEINTRE-GRAVEUR DE M. Bartscu. By 4. P. F. 
Robert-Dumesnil. 11 volumes. (Vol. 11. Supplement by Georges Duplessis.) 
Paris: Mme. Huzard. 1835-71. 


Le PEINTRE-GRAVEUR FRANGAIS CONTINUE . . . OUVRAGE FAISANT 
SUITE AU PEINTRE-GRAVEUR FRangais DE Ropert-Dumesnit. By Prosper 
de Baudicour. Paris: Mme. Bouchard-Huzard. 1859-1861. 2 volumes. 


[225] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Frencn Porrrair ENGRAVING OF THE SEVENTEENTH AND EIGHTEENTH 
Centuries. By T. H. Thomas. 39 illustrations. London: George Bell & 
Sons. Ig10. 


MELLAN, CLAUDE (1598-1688) 
Craupe Metian. By Louis R. Metcalfe. 13 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 5, No. 3, pp: 258-292. Boston. 1915. 


CATALOGUE RAISONNE DE L’OEUVRE DE Craupe MELLAN D’ABBEVILLE. By 
Anatole de Montaiglon. Biography by P. F. Mariette. Abbeville: P. Briez. 
1856. ; 


Morin, Jean (before 1590(?)—1650) 
Jean Morin. By Louis R. Metcalfe. 11 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s 
Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 1-30. Boston. 1912. 


NanTEvIL, RoBerr (1623(25?)-1678) 

Roserr Nantevir. By Louis R. Metcalfe. 12 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 1, No. 5, pp. 525-561. Boston. rg1t. 
NANTEUIL;‘SA VIE ET SON OEUVRE. By Abbé Porrée. Rouen: Cagniard. 
1890. 

Tue Drawincs anv Pasres or Nantevuit. By T. H. Thomas. 1§ illus- 
trations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 4, PP: 327-361. 
Boston. 1914. 


Lecros, ALPHONSE (1837-1911) 


AtpHonse Lecros. By Elisabeth Luther Cary. 10 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 4, PP: 439-457- Boston. 1912. 


CATALOGUE RAISONNE DE L’@:UVRE GRAVE ET LITHOGRAPHIE DE M. ALPHONSE 
Lecros, 1855-77. By Paul Auguste Poulet-Malassis and A. W. Thibaudeau. 
3 plates. Paris: J. Baur. 1877. 


WuistLer, James Aspotr McNEILt (1834-1903) (see 
Bibliography under “Landscape Etching,” p. 277). 


ZORN, ANDERS (1860- ) 


Das RADIERTE WERK DES ANDERS Zorn. By Fortunat von Schubert-Soldern. 
Illustrated. Dresden: Ernst Arnold. 190s. 


Anvers Zorn. By Loys Delteil. 328 reproductions. Paris: L’auteur. 1909. 
(Le Peintre-graveur illustré, XIX© et XX€ siécles. Vol. 4.) 


Anpers Zorn. By Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer. § illustrations. The 
Century, Vol. 24, p. 582 (New Series). New York. 1893. 


AnvERS Zorn: Parnter-Ercuer. By ¥. Nilsen Laurvik. 18 illustrations. 
The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 1, No. 5, pp. 611-637. Boston. IgIl. 


[226] 


LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


N LANDSCAPE, as in portraiture, we are greeted 

on the threshold by ALBrecut Direr. From 
his many drawings, water-colors, and the beauti- 
fully engraved backgrounds in a number of his 
plates, we know him to have been a profound 
student of natural forms and of atmospheric effects, 
sensitive to the character of the country he por- 
trays; and it is a matter of regret that The Cannon 
is the only plate in which the landscape element 
outweighs in interest the figures. The Cannon, 
which is dated 1518, is etched upon an iron plate, 
not necessarily because Diirer was unacquainted 
with a suitable mordant for copper, but rather, 
one is inclined to believe, because, etching having 
been used in the decoration of arms and armor, 
iron would naturally suggest itself as the most 
appropriate metal for the purpose. Although the 
cannon (“The Nuremberg Field Serpent’’), to the 
left, and the five Turks, to the right, are the 
main motives of the composition, they are drawn 
and bitten with lines of exactly the same weight 
and character as the landscape itself, and we 
can, 1f we will, consider them as accessory fig- 
ures, concentrating our attention upon the alto- 


[227] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


gether delightful village, its church spire pointing 
heavenwards, while in the distance wooded hills 
rise towards the sombre sky, and to the left a sea- 
port is indicated. Diirer either ignored or was un- 
aware of the effects to be obtained by repeated 
rebitings, and consequently the plate is of a unt- 
form tone. Within his self-imposed limits he has 
thoroughly understood the possibilities of the me- 
dium and has availed himself of them, adopting an 
open, linear technique, in marked contrast to his 
highly elaborate engravings on copper of this period. 
ALBRECHT ALTDORFER, who was born in Regens- 
burg about 1480 and died in February, 1538, is 
notable as one of the earliest interpreters of land- 
scape for its own sake. He has left us ten land- 
scape etchings. None of them is dated, but they 
clearly belong to his last period. In them he has 
merely transferred to metal his mode of pen draw- 
ing, an excellent style in a way, since it is linear 
and suggestive, but lacking distinction and that 
passionate, dramatic quality which is so impressive 
in the painting, St. George, in the Munich Gallery, 
the engraving of the Crucifixion; or the Agony in 
the Garden, a drawing 1n the Berlin Print Room. 
The etchings of Aucustin HrrscHVvoGEL are 
even simpler in treatment than those by Altdorfer. 
They bear dates from 1545 to 1549.: The more one 
studies his landscape plates, breathing the spirit of 


[228] 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


the true nature lover, the more fascinating do they 
become. He has eliminated all non-essentials, con- 
centrating his attention upon what were to him the 
most significant features, and in this respect he may 
have influenced the work of more than one nine- 
teenth century master. 

Hans SespatpD LauTENsAcK, who was some 
twenty years Hirschvogel’s junior, was born in 
Nuremberg about 1524. The greater number of 
his landscape plates fall within the years 1551 and 
1555. He is neither so simple nor so direct as 
Hirschvogel, and his plates suffer from over- 
elaboration. In an attempt to give a complete 
representation of the scene the value of the line is 
lost, and, in the majority of cases, the composition 
is lacking in repose. 

For almost a century we have no landscape etch- 
ings of prime importance. Then, in 1640, Rem- 
BRANDT appears on the scene with his Vzew of Am- 
sterdam, the first of a series of twenty-seven master- 
pieces which, beginning with this plate, comes to 
an end with 4 Clump of Trees with a Vista (1652). 
The View of Amsterdam 1s, among Rembrandt’s 
landscapes, comparable to the portrait of himself 
leaning on a stone sill, inasmuch as it is, in its own 
simple linear mode, a model of what etching can 
be at its best. 

As in the case of all these etchings, with the ex- 


[231] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


ception of the Three Trees and the Landscape with 
a Ruined Tower and Clear Foreground, the sky is 
left perfectly blank, and our imagination must 
supply the quiet sunshine of a cloudless day or that 
delicate grayness which makes Holland a perpetual 
delight to the painter. 

The Windmill (1641) is Rembrandt’s first dated 
etching. It is truly a portrait of a place, not only 
in its outer aspect, but in that inner spirit which, 
if it be present, moves us so profoundly, as in the 
case of Meryon’s etchings of Paris and Piranesi’s 
plates of ancient Roman edifices; or, if it be absent, 
leaves us disappointed and cold. In the Windmill, 
“we feel the stains of weather, the touch of time, 
on the structure; we feel the air about it and the 
quiet light that rests on the far horizon as the eye 
travels over dike and meadow; we are admitted to 
the subtlety and sensitiveness of a sight trans- 
cending our own; and even by some intangible 
means beyond analysis we partake of something 
of Rembrandt’s actual mind and feeling, his sense 
of what the old mill meant, not merely as a pic- 
turesque object to be drawn, but as a human ele- 
ment in the landscape, implying the daily work of 
human hands and the association of man and 
carte. 


* Rembrandt’s Landscape Etchings. By Laurence Binyon. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly. Vol. 2, No. 4, p. 414 


[232] 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


To the same year belong the Landscape with a Cot- 
tage and Haybarn and Landscape with a Cottage and 
a Large Tree, two delightfully spacious plates. There 
is one etching in 1642, the Cottage with a White 
Paling, in which dry-point is judiciously used to 
give richness to the shadows. 

To the following year, 1643, belongs the Three 
Trees, the most famous of Rembrandt’s landscape 
etchings. Note how Rembrandt has suggested the 
passing of a summer thunder-storm, the rain- 
charged clouds rolling away to the left, while from 
the right the returning sunshine bathes the com- 
position in glory, making each freshly washed leaf 
and blade of grass sparkle in its beams. Even the 
hard, slanting lines of rain in the upper left portion 
of the plate have their purpose, affording a needed 
contrast to the swiftly changing clouds, which the 
freshening breeze drives before 1t over the peopled 
plain and the far-reaching sea in the distance. 

In 1645 there are five landscape etchings. - If 
the Three Trees 1s Rembrandt’s most elaborate 
plate, Szx’s Bridge is, in some ways, his most 
learned performance. According to tradition, it was 
etched “against time,” for a wager, at the country 
house of Rembrandt’s friend, Jan Six, while the 
servant was fetching the mustard, that had been 
forgotten, from a neighboring village. There 1s, 
however, nothing hasty or incomplete about it. It 


[235] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


is, to use Whistler’s words, “‘finished from the be- 
ginning,” beautifully balanced, not a line wasted, 
of its kind a perfect work of art. 

There are no more landscapes until 1650, a good 
year, since it gives us eight plates, every one worthy 
of the most serious consideration. Rembrandt by 
this time apparently had become dissatisfied with 
the relatively limited range of light and dark ob- 
tainable by the pure etched line, and from now 
onwards he relies more and more upon dry-point 
to obtain his effects, at times executing his plates 
entirely in that medium. 

The Landscape with a Haybarn and a Flock of 
Sheep is one of the loveliest plates of this period. 
There is a brilliancy in the first state, a quiet har- 
mony in the elaborated second state, which makes 
a choice difficult. Each, in its way, is of compelling 
beauty. 

Hardly less delightful is the Landscape with a 
Milkman, with a view of the sea to the right, while 
at the left the cottages snuggle beneath their pro- 
tecting trees. 

The Landscape with a Ruined Tower and Clear 
Foreground is, perhaps, of all these etchings the 
noblest and the most dramatic. In the sky to 
the left are piled thunder clouds. A faint breeze, 
the precursor of a coming storm, gently moves the 
upper branches of the trees. There is an expectant 


[236] 


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REMBRANDT. LANDSCAPE WITH A RUINED TOWER AND CLEAR FOREGROUND 


Size of the original etching, 474 x 1254 inches 


In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


hush, a tenseness, and we are made to feel that in 
a few minutes the first heavy raindrops will be 
driving through the over-charged air. Otherwise 
all is still, the sky to the right being yet quiet and 
undisturbed. With the fewest etched lines Rem- 
brandt has indicated the form and growth of the 
trees, adding, just where needed to give emphasis 
and enrichment, touches of dry-point, concentrat- 
ing his richest blacks on the noble clump which 
shuts off the road leading toward the left. With 
such simple means, with black lines and white 
paper, he has given us by his art a more convincing 
record of one of Nature’s noblest spectacles than 
most painters, with a full palette at their com- 
mand, could achieve in a lifetime of labor. 

In the Three Cottages dry-point is used with 
magnificent effect. Early impressions of this mas- 
terpiece have a richness, a bloom, which is un- 
matched among Rembrandt’s landscape plates. A 
fine impression of the third state, with the added 
shading on the gabled end of the first cottage, 
represents the plate admirably. To be seen at its 
best, however, it should not be too heavily charged 
with ink, since the tree forms thereby are confused. 
Work such as this is so seemingly simple that one 
may readily overlook the power of analysis and the 
superb draughtsmanship it displays. Everyone 
who loves Rembrandt’s landscapes—and who that 


[241] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


knows them does not love them?—must bitterly 
regret that at about this time, in the very pleni- 
tude of his powers, he saw fit to bring his landscape 
work to a close. 

It is true that we have the Goldweigher’s Field of 
1651—an unsurpassed masterpiece—and in the fol- 
lowing year the Landscape with a Road Beside a 
Canal and dA Clump of Trees with a Vista; but had 
he treated a landscape motive with the passion 
which breathes from the Three Crosses, Christ Pre- 
sented to the People, or the Presentation in the Tem- 
ple, how much richer and fuller would landscape 
art have been! 

The Goldweigher’s Field, by tradition the country 
seat of the Receiver General, Uytenbogeert, whose 
portrait Rembrandt had etched in 1639 (The Gold- 
weigher), 18, in point of suggestiveness, second to 
none of Rembrandt’s plates. The eye is gently led 
from field to fertile field, each with its own indi- 
vidual character and filled with interesting little 
details, and finally rests upon the quiet sea which 
stretches to the horizon. 

Contemporary with Rembrandt, treating scenes 
essentially the same, a whole school of etchers pro- 
duced an enormous number of plates, many of 
them charming, but none to be classed with the 
permanently great work in the history of the art. 

HERCULES SEGHERS Is interesting because of his 


[242] 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


choice of wild, rugged mountains for his subject- 
matter and of his experiments in color printing, 
but as an etcher he is of historical importance only. 

Jacos Ruyspast displays a knowledge of tree 
forms and an appreciation of their beauty, rare at 
any time. His work at its best recalls that of the 
great nineteenth century master, Théodore Rous- 
seau, though the latter’s few plates show a greater 
economy of means and an equal affection for Na- 
ture in her wilder moods. The Wheat Field is one 
of Ruysdael’s most satisfying plates. The sky, with 
_ its rolling clouds, is simply treated and shows a 
knowledge and reticence in the use of line denied 
to the greater number of his more laborious con- 
temporaries, who, in the main, when they en- 
deavored to “finish” a plate ended by leaving it 
fatigued and stiff. 

CLAUDE GELLEE, called CLaupgE Lorratn, is the 
one seventeenth century French landscape etcher. 
Born in the year 1600 in the Diocese of Toul and 
the Duchy of Lorraine (whence he derives the name 
by which he is best known), early orphaned, at the 
age of thirteen, after a varied and picturesque boy- 
hood, journeyed to Rome, thence to Naples, and 
later to Venice. In 1627 he settled permanently in 
Rome, where he remained until his death in 1682. 

His etchings are the fruit of that indefatigable 
study of nature which he pursued almost until the 


[245] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


day of his death. Heedless of fatigue, he would 
spend day after day, from sunrise until nightfall, 
noting every phase of dawn, the glory of sunrise, 
or the majesty of the sunset hours. For him the 
modest nook held no charm and exerted no fascina- 
tion. He chose for his theme Nature in her more 
spacious aspects—wide-stretching horizons and 
deep overarching skies, with clumps of stately 
trees, between and beyond which are to be seen 
castle-crowned hills, or a half-ruined temple, the 
relic of Imperial Rome, a passionate love for which 
burned with a steady flame in Claude, more Roman 
than the Romans themselves in his worship of the 
Eternal City and all that could recall her vanished 
glory. 

Claude’s paintings are to be seen in nearly every 
European gallery of importance, but his etchings 
are seldom met with. Really fine impressions (by 
which alone they can be judged) are unfortunately 
very rare. His work would seem to divide itself 
into two periods: 1630 to 1637, and 1662 and 
1663. It is to the earlier period that his finest 
work belongs, the later plates being heavy and 
stiff in treatment. Claude’s etchings show none of 
that economy and suggestiveness of line which 
make of Rembrandt’s most summary sketch a 
continuous stimulus and delight. They are highly 
wrought pictures, as carefully and lovingly finished 


[246] 


EANDSCAPE ETCHING 


in all details as are the paintings themselves. Etch- 
ing, dry-point, the burnisher, and a tone produced 
by roughening the surface of the plate with pumice- 
stone or some similar material, all are called into 
play to produce a harmonious result, and of their 
kind there is nothing finer. 

The Dance Under the Trees shows Claude in his 
most purely pastoral vein—classic pastoral—seen 
through Virgilian eyes and interpreted in the spirit 
of the Eclogues. It is carefully composed and 
beautifully drawn; and if, to our more modern 
taste, there seems a little too obvious an “‘arrange- 
ment,” with the two vistas balancing one another 
at the right and left of the central group of trees, 
we must remember that landscape, no less than 
literature or costume, has its fashions, and that, 
in Claude’s time, balance and proportion were es- 
teemed of greater value than the freedom and 
spontaneity which we today, more insistent on the 
individual note, esteem the chief charm of etching. 

Le Bouvier, etched in 1636, is accounted Claude’s 
masterpiece. “For technical quality of a certain 
delicate kind it is the finest landscape etching in 
the world. Its transparency and gradation have 
never been surpassed.’”* It is the work of a 
real nature lover and true poet, and sums up in a 


*Etching and Etchers. By Philip Gilbert Hamerton. London; Macmillan 
& Co. 1868. p.178. 


[247] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


few square inches all that is best of Claude’s art 
when it has shaken itself free from the “set scene” 
and theatricalities. Technically it is not less ad- 
mirable. The copper has been caressed, so to speak, 
with the needle, until it responds by yielding all 
those elusive half lights and luminous shadows 
which play among the leaves of the noble trees to 
the left, while on the right the landscape fairly 
swims in light and air. For this same quality of 
sunlight Claude tries again and again in his etch- 
ings, in Sunrise with complete success. When he 
essays to interpret Nature in her sterner moods, as 
in the Flock in Stormy Weather (his one plate of the 
year 1651), he is far less happy. The clouds, which 
should be heavy with rain, are unconvincing, 
though the suggestion of movement in the trees is 
excellent, and in no other plate has he treated 
architecture with a firmer touch or in a more pic- 
turesque manner. 

After the middle of the seventeenth century, 
etching, as an original, creative art, is increasingly 
neglected for almost two hundred years, though it 
grows in popularity as an easy and expeditious 
mode of “forwarding” a plate to be finished with 
the burin. 

To Cuar.es Jacques, in the early “forties,” be- 
longs the honor of having restored etching to its 
proper and legitimate place as a suggestive and 


[248] 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


linear art. His method is based on a thorough 
understanding of its limitations and qualities as 
exemplified by Rembrandt and his lesser contem- 
poraries in Holland; and both by his work (he has 
left between five and six hundred plates) and by his 
influence, he is the father of the nineteenth century 
revival of etching, not only in France, where its 
possibilities were appreciated at once by the Ro- 
mantic group and the “Men of 1830,” but in Eng- 
land, through Seymour Haden and Whistler. 

Charles Jacque was born in Paris on May 23, 
1813, and to the last (he died at the ripe age of 81, 
in the year 1894) he retained, in country life, some- 
thing of the city man’s point of view, the love of the 
“picturesque,” the anecdotic, in marked contrast 
to his greater contemporary, Jean-Francois Millet, 
whose few etchings form an epic of the soil even 
more powerful than his paintings. For all that, 
Jacque is a true etcher, working along the soundest 
lines and safest traditions. He is unequal: his work 
suffers at times from a hankering for “‘finish’’; but 
at his best his little plates are delightfully suggest- 
ive, every line being there for a purpose, and not a 
line too much. 

Up to 1848 he had completed some three hundred 
etchings and dry-points, and it is among this group 
that many “masterpieces in little” are to be found. 
It would be hard to find a better model of style 


[251] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


than the Wheat Field. The print is scarcely 
larger than a visiting card, but it conveys a sense 
of spaciousness and “‘out of doors”’ sadly lacking in 
many a painting in full color and of a hundred times 
its size. The Truffle Gatherers is likewise of modest 
size, but the landscape with its leafless trees 1s full 
of air, and the sense of life and movement, as well 
as the effective composition of the “rooters’’ ac- 
companied by their herdsman, is, from many points 
of view, unexcelled. 

The Storm—Landscape with a White Horse 1s 
one of Jacque’s finest interpretations of wind and 
rough weather. This dry-point, unfortunately very 
rare, recalls the work of Rembrandt in his mature 
period. The sky, slashed with driving showers, the 
trees swayed this way and that by the gusty wind, 
the white horse with legs firmly braced, its mane 
and tail matted by the rain against its neck and 
flank, all combine to heighten and intensify the 
effect. 

Younger than Jacque by four years (he was 
born February 15, 1817), CHarLes-Francois Dav- 
BIGNY differs from him in that it is the lyric, the 
spiritual aspect of nature, rather than the inciden- 
tal and picturesque details of country life, which 
moved him. 

None of the other Barbizon men has so success- 
fully interpreted the freshness of early morning, 


[252] 


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In the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 


FRANCOIS DAUBIGNY. 


CHARLES 


¥% 


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Size of the original etching, 


LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


the sparkle of sunrise on tender young leaves or 
dew-bespangled grass, the tranquility of the quiet 
pool hidden in the depth of the forest. His first 
plate, etched in collaboration with his friend Meis- 
sonier, 1s dated 1838, and all through the “‘forties”’ 
Daubigny continued to etch either original motives 
or such as were commissioned by editors for the 
embellishment of various publications, in many 
cases poems and songs of a pastoral nature. It is, — 
however, to the following decade that his finest 
work belongs—a series of little masterpieces which, 
in their way, remain unequalled. His plates, small 
in size, are as carefully worked out as those of 
Claude but with a truer feeling for the elusive 
charm of still, untroubled places. Later his style 
grows broader and bolder. Less is actually said, 
more is suggested. There is a freedom in his line 
work which these etchings of his middle period had . 
hardly led us to expect but for which, in truth, they 
were the finest preparation. He has learned to 
eliminate the non-essential; and in etching the art 
of omission 1s thessupreme virtue. 

One of the most suggestive plates of his middle 
period is Deer in a Wood. The treatment is perfectly 
simple and straightforward, truly linear, as all good 
etching should be, but the spirit of the scene is 
captured and portrayed in these few, seemingly 
careless, lines. Deer Coming Down to Drink is an- 


[255] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


other altogether delightful plate in the same series. 
The early morning air is vibrant with the glory of 
sunrise, and the little leaves clap their hands in Joy. 

“Has it not often occurred to you, in your ex- 
plorations as a tourist, to see suddenly open before 
you a break in the landscape; a little valley, calm, 
in repose, full of elegant and tranquil forms, of 
discreet and harmonious colors, of softened shad- 
ows and lights, bordered by hillsides with rounded 
and retiring forms and where no step seems to have 
troubled the poetic silence? A pond, placed there 
like a mirror, reflects the picture, and bears on its 
cup-like edge sheaves of rushes, coltsfoot, arrow- 
heads, water-strawberries and the white and yellow 
flowers of the water lily, amid which swarm a buz- 
zing world of insects and gnats. . . . As you 
approach, some heron, occupied in dressing its 
plumage, flies off, snapping its beak; the snipe runs 
away, piping its little cry; then everything falls 
again into silence, and the valley, welcoming you 
as its guest, takes up under your eyes 1ts mysterious 
work.’* All this and more Daubigny gives us by 
his art. 

Daubigny’s success as a painter, the constantly 
increasing demand for his work, left him little time, 
as years went by, for etching. “If only I could 
paint a picture that wou/dn’t sell,” he once said in. 


* Count Clément de Ris. L’Artiste. June, 1853. 


[256] 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


sheer desperation, and, momentarily, his superb 
renderings of the mystery of evening and night ac- 
complished his object, though now they are jeal- 
ously guarded in some of the world’s finest col- 
lections. But to etch night, to suggest moonlight— 
there was a problem indeed! Whistler in his ‘“‘Noc- 
turnes” paints, so to speak, on his plate with 
printer’s ink. Daubigny relies on lines alone, to 
produce his result. “Night cannot be etched” is the 
dictum of more than one authority. No, nor sun- 
light either, nor clouds! None of these things can 
be pictured so that blind eyes can see them. But 
to those who will meet the etcher half way, who 
are content with a suggestion and are capable of 
reconstructing from it the artist’s mood, these 
simple linear plates of Daubigny’s last period are 
a revelation and a delight. Moonlight on the Banks 
of the Oise measures scant four by six inches, yet 
what a feeling of space there is in it! Only a born 
etcher could have succeeded by means so simple, 
and seemingly inadequate, in capturing the very 
spirit of such a scene. 

Coror’s etched work comprises fourteen plates. 
It was not until 1845, when he was in his fiftieth 
year, that he made his first experiment. “Corot 
took a prepared copper-plate and drew in the out- 
lines and masses of the well-known Souvenir of 
Tuscany, but did not proceed to the ‘biting in’ 


[259] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


process. Some years later Félix Bracquemond dis- 
covered the plate in a nail-box at Corot’s studio 
and begged the master to complete it, offering to 
take charge of the ‘biting in.’ Corot then took the 
plate and added the tones and details of the final 
state. . . . There was something in the use of 
mordants and acids that seemed to frighten Corot, 
and he always called in some good friend such as 
Bracquemond, Michelin or Delaunay to assist 1n 
this delicate process.’’* 

In etching his method is as personal as in his 
painting. He entirely disregards:all the accepted 
canons of the art. Line, as dine, hardly exists in his 
plates; it is scribble, scribble, everywhere. The tree 
trunks, the rocks, foreground and distance, often 
the foliage itself, all are as ‘“wrong as wrong can be,” 
so far as accurate representation is concerned. Yet 
Corot, great artist and great nature poet, can trans- 
gress every rule and still succeed in conveying his 
message. In the best of his etchings he does succeed 
admirably. Souvenir of Italy and Environs of Rome 
of 1865 (Corot was then nearly seventy years of 
age) are among the most interesting prints of the 
period. In these plates, and others like them, 
Corot has given free rein to his poetic and imagina- 
tive powers and has drawn upon his memory of the 


* Le Pére Corot. By Robert J. Wickenden. The Print-Collector’s Quar- 
terly. Vol. 2, No. 3. p. 382. 


[260] 


ENIR OF ITALY 


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Size of the original etching, 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


Italy of his youth. In method, in their disregard 
of line, form and texture, they are shining examples 
of what etching should or be. In decorative qual- 
ity, poetic suggestion, and sentiment they are alto- 
gether delightful. 

In Mitier’s etchings the landscape and the 
figures are so inter-related as to make any separate 
study of them unavailing. They are models of 
significant draughtsmanship and profound feeling, 
in which nothing is introduced that does not bear 
directly upon the main theme. Shepherdess Knit- 
ting, Peasants Going to Work, Two Men Digging, 
and above all the Gleaners, have each their perfect 
setting. The wide-stretching plain, slightly undu- 
lating, shimmers in the hot summer sunshine, 
which bathes in a golden glow the three women 
gleaning, the harvesters gathering in the rich 
fruits of their toil, and the little village, snuggling 
amid its trees in the far distance to the right. 

Etchers, like poets, are ““born, not made.” But, 
as also in the case of poets, natural gifts will avail 
little if they are not reinforced by that capacity for 
taking infinite pains, through which alone a man 
may so master his medium as to shape it readily 
to his artistic needs. The etched work of Seymour 
HADEN is no chance happening. It is the fruit of 
close and analytical study, by a man of forceful 
character and scientific attainments, of the best 


[263] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


model of style, the etchings of Rembrandt; supple- 
mented by a familiarity with the work of his con- 
temporaries in France, the land of clear and logical 
thinking; and in no art 1s clarity and brevity of 
speech more essential than in etching. From the 
beginning, Seymour Haden was in possession. of 
all his powers, both in etching and in dry-point. 
There is no uncertainty in that which he wishes to 
say, no fumbling in his manner of saying ft. Phe 
reticences and half-hesitations of Daubigny are not 
for him; there is no place for Corot’s scribbled po- 
etry. He will give us a strong man’s interpretation 
of the lovely English landscape, in which he takes a 
pride, as in any other personal possession—God’s 
visible and abounding bounty to a superior people. 
It is “the bones of things” (his own phrase) that he 
wishes, above all else, to give. At his best he suc- 
ceeds magnificently, but in much of his work, 
structurally fine though it be, it is the frame rather 
than the spirit that he portrays. 

A Water Meadow (incidentally, a plate which the 
artist himself liked) is a fine transcript of a sudden 
shower in the Hampshire lowlands. It is bold and 
painter-like, admirable from every point of view, 
though some may prefer On the Test, with its truly 
noble sky, etched later in the day from a somewhat 
different point of view. Cardigan Bridge is a model 
of what a sketch should be, free, suggestive, spon- 


[264] 


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LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


taneous, yet full of knowledge. It is one of five 
similar plates, etched in a single day, August 17, 
1864, a “good day”’ indeed, such as rarely comes to 
etchers or to painters! The more one sees of modern 
etching, the more one 1s inclined to value work of 
this order. It is so easy, so fatally easy, to make 
wriggles in the water and scribbles in the sky; but 
to suggest, by these seeming careless loops and 
latchets, the flow of the river, the movement of. 
clouds, the splendor of the setting sun—+that indeed 
is another matter! Yet all this, and more, Seymour 
Haden has done in a magisterial manner. 
By-road in Tipperary is the largest and most 
highly prized of his woodland plates and well de- 
serves the reputation it so long has enjoyed. Struc- 
turally the trees are very fine, both as to branch 
and stem drawing; and, as in the two plates of 
Kensington Gardens, the suggestion of foliage with 
the light filtering through the leaves is quite beauti- 
ful. Sunset in Ireland is a plate which the artist, 
the collector, and the general public all unite in 
praising. “That is the plate,” said Seymour Haden, 
shortly before his death, “‘which, in years to come, 
will fetch the enormous prices!” And his prophecy 
has come true. Both in its earlier states, less rich 
in burr, with a luminous evening effect, and in the 
later and darker impressions, it 1s ‘“‘a thing of 
beauty’”’—one of the most remarkable landscape 


[269] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


plates of modern times, wherein the artist has 
captured, for once, all the poetry and melancholy 
sentiment of the twilight hour. Sawley Abbey, on 
the River Ribble in Lancashire, has, to some of us, 
however, a “swing” and pattern, which make of it 
a better and more manly plate. It must be seen in 
an early state to be adequately judged. For some 
inexplicable reason the artist saw fit later to “clean 
up” the sky and all the foreground to the right, 
leaving the plate cold, empty, and almost mean- 
ingless. 

Nine Barrow Down, a dry-point, is in Haden’s 
happiest vein. It is instinct with that priceless 
quality, the ‘“‘art which conceals art,’ and is so 
seeming simple that one may readily forget that its 
“simplicity” is the result of a most rigid selection 
of the essential lines, guided by the knowledge of a 
lifetime. 

There is a growing tendency among the younger 
and more “‘advanced”’ collectors to belittle Sey- 
mour Haden and his work. Unquestionably there 
are many etchings which fall far short of his best; 
but at Ais best, in the dozen or two plates of which 
he himself approved, he towers far above any of 
his contemporaries, and there seems little likeli- 
hood of his supremacy in landscape being seriously 
threatened. 

WHISTLER, ‘the greatest etcher and the most ac- 


[270] 


J. A. McN. WHISTLER. ZAANDAM (First State) 


inches 


16x 854 


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Size of the or 


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LANDSCAPE. ETCHING 


complished lithographer who ever lived’’ (accord- 
ing to Mr. Joseph Pennell), seems to have inter- 
ested himself in landscape hardly at all. Not even 
his most ardent disciples would assert that the 
master’s few purely landscape plates contribute 
greatly to the pyramid of his fame. But even here 
one must tread softly. Whistlerium tremens is still 
a highly contagious disease; and has not his official 
biographer written “All his work is alike perfect”’? 
How then may a modest lecturer presume to praise 
or compare? Let Mr. Pennell speak: “Look at 
Rembrandt’s prints made, I do not know whether 
with Amsterdam or Zaandam in the background, 
and then at Whistler’s of the same subjects. Rem- 
brandt drew and bit and printed these little plates 
as no one had up to his time. But Whistler is as 
much in advance of Rembrandt as that great artist 
was of his predecessors. In these little distant views 
of absolutely the same subject, Whistler has tri- 
umphed. It is not necessary to explain how: you 
have only to see the prints to knowit. . . The 
older master is conservative and mannered; the 
modern master, respecting all the great art of the 
past, 1s gracious and sensitive, and perfectly free.” 

“You have only to see the prints to know it.” 
Well, let us look at two of them: Rembrandt’s 
View of Amsterdam, of 1640, and Whistler’s 
Zaandam. ‘Why drag in Velasquez?” the master of 


[273] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


the gentle art.of making enemies is reported to 
have said, upon one historic occasion. This time, 
so far as landscape etching is concerned, may it 
not be Rembrandt’s turn to say, “Why drag in 
Whistler?” 


[274] 


LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


Fine Prints. By Frederick Wedmore. 15 illustrations. Edinburgh: John 
Grant. 1905. 

Tue Great PainTer-ETcHERS FROM REMBRANDT TO WHISTLER. By Malcolm 
C. Salaman. Edited by Charles Holme. 191 illustrations. London, Paris, 
New York: The Studio. 1914. 

Four Masters or Ercuinc. [Haden, Jacquemart, Whistler, Legros.| By 
Frederick Wedmore. Original etchings by Haden, Jacquemart, Whistler, and 
Legros. London: Fine Art Society. 1883. 

Durcu ErcHers OF THE SEVENTEENTH Century. By Laurence Binyon. 4 
reproductions and 29 text illustrations. London: Seeley & Co. 1896. 
(Portfolio Artistic Monographs. No. 21.) 


ALTDORFER, ALBRECHT (c. 1480-1538) 

Avprecut AttporFER By T. Sturge Moore. Edited by Laurence Binyon. 
25 illustrations. New York: Longmans, Green & Co.; London: The Unicorn 
eS Presse gO 

AtsBrecutT ALTpoRFERS LanpscHarTs RADIERUNGEN. Edited by Max Ff. 
Friedlinder. 9 reproductions and 1 text illustration. Berlin: Bruno Cassirer. 
1906. (Graphische Gesellschaft. Publication 3.) 

ALBRECHT ALTDORFER AND Wotr Huser. By Hermann Voss. 160 repro- 
ductions on 63 plates. Leipzig: Klinkhardt & Biermann. 1g1o. (Meister 
der Graphik. Vol. 3.) 


GELLEE, CLAupDE, called Lorrain (1600-1682) 


CraupeE Lorratn; Painter AND EtcHer. By George Graham. 4 reproduc- 
tions and 23 text illustrations. London: Seeley & Co. 1895. (The Portfolio 
Artistic Monographs.) 


RemBranpt Harmensz van Rijn (See also Bibliography 
under “Some Masters of Portraiture,” p. 224.) 


Remsranpt’s LanpscaPe Ercuines. By Laurence Binyon. 8 illustrations. 
The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 4, pp. 407-432. Boston. 1912. 


Jacque, CHartes EmiLe (1813-1894) 

L’oruvre DE Cu. JacQuE; CATALOGUE DE SES EAUX-FORTES ET POINTES 
stones. By Fules Marie Foseph Guiffrey. With an original etching. Paris: 
Mlle. Lemaire. 1866. 

———. NOUVELLES EAUX-FORTES ET POINTES SECHES. Supplement au 
catalogue. Paris: Jouaust & Sigaux. 1884. 

Cuartes Jacque. By Robert F Wickenden. 18 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 74-101. Boston. 1912. 


[275] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


Reprinted. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1914. (Print- 
Collectors’ Booklets.) 


Dausicny, CHARLES Francois (1817-1878) 


C. Dausicny ET SON OEUVRE GRAVE. By Frédéric Henriet. § original etch- 
ings and 4 reproductions. Paris: A. Levy. 1875. 

Davusicny. By YFean Laran. 48 reproductions. Paris: Librairie centrale des 
Beaux-Arts. n.d. (L’Art de Notre Temps.) 

Cuar_es-Frangors DauBicny; PAINTER AND ErcHer. By Robert }. Wicken- 
den. 15 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 
177-206. Boston. 1913. 

. Reprinted. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1914. (Print- 
Collectors’ Booklets.) 


Corot, JEAN Baptiste CAMILLE (1796-1875) 
Corot. By Loys Delteil. An original etching and 102 reproductions. Paris: 
L’auteur. 1gto. (Le peintre-graveur illustré, XTX® et XX© siécles. Vol. 5.) 


Coror and Minter. With critical essays by Gustave Geffroy and Arséne 
Alexandre. Edited by Charles Holme. 120 illustrations. London, Paris, New 
York: John Lane. 1902. (The Studio.) 

“Le PEre Corot.” By Robert 7. Wickenden. g illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 365-386. Boston. 1912. 
Reprinted. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1914. (Print- 
Collectors’ Booklets.) 


MiIvtet, JEAN-FRANCOIS (1814-1875) 


Jean-Francgois Mititet. By Arséne Alexandre. Tur Ercuincs or J. F. 
Miter. By Frederick Keppel. 85 illustrations. London and New York: 
John Lane. 1903. (The Studio.) 


Jean-Francois Mitier. By Loys Delteil. Illustrated. Paris: L’auteur. 
1906. (Le peintre-graveur illustré, XITX® et XX® siécles. Vol. I.) 


ALFRED Lesprun’s CaTALocue or THE Ercuincs, HELtocrapus, Lirxo- 
GrapHs AnD Woopcuts Done By JeAn-Francots Miter. Translated from 
the French by Frederick Keppel. With additional notes and a sketch of the 
artist’s life. 7 reproductions. New York: Frederick Keppel & Co. 1887. 
Jean-Frangois Mitiet; Painrer-Ercuer. \By Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensse- 
Jaer. With a biographical sketch of Millet by Frederick Keppel. 11 illus- 
trations. New York: Frederick Keppel & Co. 1go1. (The Keppel Booklets. 
Ist series.) 

Tue Arr anpd Ercuines oF JEAN-Francgors Muitier. By Robert Ff. 
Wickenden. 14 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 2, 
pp- 225-250. Boston. 1912. 

——— ———. Reprinted. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 1914. 
(Print-Collectors’ Booklets.) 


[276] 


LANDSCAPE ETCHING 


Mitier’s Drawincs In THE Museum or Fine Arts, Boston. By Robert 7. 
Wickenden. 11 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 1, 
pp: 3-30: Boston. 1914. 


Haven, Francis SEYMouR (1818-1910) 


A Descriptive CATALOGUE OF THE ErcHeD Work or Francis SEYMOUR 
Haven. By Sir William Richard Drake. London: Macmillan & Co. 1880. 


Ture Encravep Work or Sir Francis SEyMour Hapen, P. R. E. By H. 
Nazeby Harrington. 250 reproductions on 10g plates. Liverpool: Henry 
Young & Sons. Ig1o. 

Tue Warter-Cotors and Drawinos or Sir Seymour Haven, P. R. E. By 
H. Nazeby Harrington. 8 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, 
Vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 405-419. Boston. IgIt. 

Str Seymour Haven, Parnrer-Ercuer. By Frederick Keppel. 5 illustra- 
tions. New York: Frederick Keppel & Co. 1go1. (The Keppel Booklets. 
Ist series.) 

PersonaL CHARACTERISTICS OF SIR SEyMouR Hapen, P. R. E. By Frederick 
Keppel. 27 illustrations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly. 2 parts. Partals 
Vol. 1, No. 3, pp- 291-316. Part II. Vol 1, No. 4, pp. 421-442. Boston. IgII. 


WuistLer, James Appotr McNEILL 


Tue Ercuep Worx or WuistLer. ILLUSTRATED BY REPRODUCTIONS IN 
CoLLotyPsE OF THE DirrERENT STATES OF THE PLares. Compiled, arranged, 
and described by Edward G. Kennedy. With an introduction by Royal Cortis- 
soz 1002 reproductions. New York: The Grolier Club. 1910. 

A Descriptive CATALOGUE OF THE Ercuincs AND Drypoints or JAMES 
Assotr McNerit Wutstier. By Howard Mansfield. 1 portrait. Chicago: 
Caxton Club. 1909. 

WuisTLer As A Critic or His Own Prints. By Howard Mansfield. 12 illus- 
trations. The Print-Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 367-393- 
Boston. 1913. 

Tue Lire or James McNett Wuistier. By Elizabeth Robins Pennell and 
Foseph Pennell. 7 illustrations. sth edition. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott 
Company. IgI1. 

Mr. WuistLer’s LirHoGrapus; THE Caratocur. By Thomas R. Way. 1 
lithograph. London: George Bell & Sons. 1896. 

Wauistier’s Lirnocrapus. By Thomas R. Way. 18 illustrations. The Print- 
Collector’s Quarterly, Vol. 3, No. 3, pp- 279-309. Boston. 1913. 

Tue LiraocrapHs By WHisTLeR, ILLUSTRATED By REPRODUCTIONS IN 
PHOTOGRAVURE AND LITHOGRAPHY, ARRANGED ACCORDING TO THE CaTA- 
LoGur BY Tuomas R. Way, wit AppitionaL Supyects Not Berore RE- 
corDED. 166 reproductions. New York: Kennedy & Co. 1914. 

Tue Art or James McNertt Wuistier. By T. R. Way and G. R. Dennis. 
11 portraits and 41 plates. London: George Bell & Sons. 1904. 


[277] 


ENGRAVERS AND ETCHERS 


WuisTLer’s Ercutncs; a Srupy anp 4 Caratocue. By Frederick Wedmore 
London: A. W. Thibaudeau. 1886. 


. Same. 2nd edition. London: P. & D. Colnaghi & Co. 1899. 


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